|
In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
|
SUNDAY SPECIAL: The Lakers' troubled legacy
Saturday August 09, 2003
By HAL BOCK AP Sports Writer
Kobe Bryant's legal problems represent just the latest trouble
for the Los Angeles Lakers, one of the NBA's most successful teams
and, at the same time, one of its most star-crossed.
The Lakers' resume is full of enormous achievement 14
championships, the NBA's best all-time regular season and playoff
won-loss record and the most playoff series won by any team.
And yet there is a dark side to this team's brilliant history,
an undercurrent of trouble that surfaces every so often and stains
the Lakers' legacy of success.
Kermit Washington of the Lakers nearly killed Houston's Rudy
Tomjanovich on Dec. 7, 1977, with a devastating punch to his face
at the Forum, then the Lakers' home court. Washington was suspended
for 60 days and fined $10,000 the heaviest penalty in NBA history
at the time.
``It was a catastrophic situation,'' said Jack McCloskey, then
an assistant coach with the Lakers. ``It was the hardest punch I
ever saw and I've seen some big ones.
``The team was stunned that it happened. In our practices after
that, I felt they were a little subdued and didn't have the energy
or focus they normally had. I think it lasted throughout the
season. It was always there.''
The Lakers drifted to a fourth-place finish and first-round
playoff elimination. Two years later, they were NBA champs, carried
to the title by a precocious rookie named Magic Johnson.
There would be four more Lakers championships orchestrated by
Johnson before the shocking announcement on Nov. 7, 1991, that he
was retiring at age 32 because he had the AIDS virus. He made a
brief comeback, tried coaching for a while and now is a successful
businessman.
On the 10-year anniversary of that news conference, Johnson was
a grateful man. ``I feel wonderful,'' he said. ``I celebrate life
and I live every day. Every day is a holiday for me.''
The Lakers' first championship in Los Angeles came in 1972, the
season the team set an NBA record with 33 straight victories. Those
were the Lakers of Wilt Chamberlain and Jerry West, and they became
the toast of Tinseltown.
In his 1990 autobiography, Chamberlain claimed he had affairs
with 20,000 women, a stunning admission at a time during heightened
concerns about sexually transmitted diseases.
``I was just doing what was natural,'' Chamberlain explained,
``chasing good-looking ladies, whoever they were and wherever they
were available.''
Lakers star James Worthy was arrested in 1990 for soliciting a
prostitute. It did not prevent him from being picked as one of the
NBA's 50 greatest players in 1997 and being elected to the Hall of
Fame last April.
Then came Bryant, telling a packed news conference in Los
Angeles last month that he had cheated on his wife. The admission
and the sexual assault charge against him could cost him millions
in endorsement income.
The common denominator in every case is the Lakers.
``They've been very fortunate because their brand has not been
significantly tarnished by a number of player indiscretions over
the years,'' said David Carter, a principal of the Los
Angeles-based Sports Business Group. ``I think what it boils down
to is the Lakers' brand is greater than the sum of its parts, which
in this case is the players.
``Many people think player first and then the team. I think
around the world, people think first of the Lakers and not always
the players. The comparison there might be to the New York Yankees.
It seems to be the Lakers are in rare air, getting a pass while
others might not.''
During their run of three straight NBA titles, there was
constant squabbling in Los Angeles between Bryant and Shaquille
O'Neal. Occasionally, coach Phil Jackson was drawn into the fray,
when he didn't have his own intramural spats.
And still, they win.
One day, the team introduces new stars Karl Malone and Gary
Payton. The next day, in the same building, Bryant tearfully
acknowledges cheating on his wife but proclaims his innocence to
the criminal charge.
Good news, then bad news. Team Teflon or Team Turmoil, the
Lakers press on, always finding a way to flourish in the fishbowl.
``It is Hollywood,'' said Jamaal Wilkes, who spent nine seasons
playing in Los Angeles. ``It's where heroes are made. It's the
whole imagery thing. When it's working for you, it's awesome, when
it backfires, it's equally awesome.''
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
|