Showing posts with label Larry Bird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Larry Bird. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

Actor Mounts Campaign to Be Cast as Magic

After retweeting a press release announcing the casting of Tug Coker as Larry Bird and noting my interest in the coming-soon-to-Broadway Magic Bird, I was hit up with a Tweet from actor Leonard Dozier who (with a release of his own) is vying to play Bird's rival opposite Coker.

From the release...

Thus, miscasting either of these icons, even with the right names, can be catastrophic for the production.

On the other hand, casting a Magic that looks, sounds and acts like him maybe critical to this production with Bird already cast. Leonard Dozier, a 6'4 actor and former basketball player, would be quite convincing as Magic. While his name wouldn't have theatergoers rushing to the box-office, the word of mouth about his performance would. Besides, those not interested in sports or Magic and Bird aren't going regardless.
Judge for yourself with Dozier's sizzle real which includes his best Magic impression, a little singing and, of course, baby sky hooks.




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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Rashard Lewis Handles Himself Well Among Inebriated Fans

Here's some footage we had from Orlando before Rashard Lewis got shipped up to DC.



Lady: "Who's a better defender? Rondooooo...or ahh...who like who you like to play worst against?"

Lewis: "Rondo? Ron Artest is a better defender than Rondo."

Lady: "Yeah but who who hurts you the most?"

Lewis: "Who hurts me? Nobody."

Lady: "Like nah I mean..." [left jab, left jab]

Lewis: "Jesus! He's the only one!"

She recovers nicely and reflects back to Larry Bird and "that kid" from Detroit Bill Laimbeer.

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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Audio: Bird and Magic on LeBron James' Pending Free Agency

As part of promotion for their recently release book, When the Game Was Ours, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird took questions from journalists and bloggers.

Here, Magic talks about the change in atmosphere in NY (or NJ) that LeBron would bring should he come to the Knicks or Nets, whereas Bird extols the virtues of Cleveland's fans and expresses hope that the King stays put in the state that he's from and on the team that drafted him - for the betterment of the game and League as a whole.

Magic adds that staying in Cleveland also gives him the best chance at winning, noting the salary purge that the Knicks would have to make in order to free up money to get James.




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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Bird & Magic: When the Game Was Theirs

This past March marked the 30th anniversary of perhaps the most pivotal event in NCAA and NBA basketball history - the 1979 NCAA Championship Game between Larry Bird's Indiana state Sycamores and Magic Johnson's Michigan State Spartans.

After reading Seth Davis' When March Went Mad: The Game That Transformed Basketball and speaking with the author/analyst, I noted that the legacy which followed that game "helped reshape the pro and college games and ushered in a new era of televised basketball."

From an April 2009 HHR post
:

Their equally uncertain and tumultuous recruiting experiences aside, their paths to stardom couldn't have been more contrasting, and as such, the Bird-Magic rivalry which ushered in an unprecedented era of hoops could, in many ways, have never come to fruition.

With ESPN still in its infancy, March Madness hardly a nationwide cultural phenomenon as we know it today, and the NBA a fledgling league struggling to appeal to mainstream America, the attention-shunning, but competition-driven, "Hick from French Lick" and the charismatic, camera-friendly and freakishly skilled 6'9" point guard from Michigan captured the country's attention throughout the ensuing decade.

The league and broadcasters learned how to effectively capture that attention and market sport around its superstars. The rest, as they say, is history.

As their Hall of Fame careers progressed, their paths to the Hall of Fame - often seen as stark contrasts to one another (Showtime vs. Blue Collar, and, yes, Black vs. White) - actually ran almost exactly parallel, with each man's drive and intensity derived directly from the other. Once bitter rivals, Magic and Bird's mutual admiration helped dissolve the competitive hatred that early defined their relationship.

Today, their places in history are nearly inseparable.

What the 1979 Championship game did for the NCAA and televised hoops, the Magic and Bird Rivalry did for the NBA. Without the duo, along with David Stern, the NBA as we know it might not exist - not just the game, but the culture, as their revolutionary, bank-breaking "Choose Your Weapon" Converse campaign upped the ante with Nike to go all out with Air Jordan, and paved the way to the shoe endorsement racket ever-present today.

While its coverage of their early years and much of their playing career isn't ground breaking, the release of this month's joint memoir When the Game Was Ours. (with Jackie MacMullan) provides a fresh, first person perspective of their rivalry.

Much of the attention with the book's release surrounded the comments made by Magic regarding Isiah Thomas' alleged blacklisting from the 1992 Olympic Dream Team. However, those anecdotes are really just a small part of the book. Johnson places his own animosity towards Zeke on the Pistons guard's (and once good friend and confidant's) lack of support and unfounded accusations of Magic's homosexuality in the wake of his HIV revelations.

"Isiah kept questioning people about it. I couldn't believe that. Everyone else - Byron, Arsenio, Michael, Larry - they were all supporting me. And the one guy I thought I could count on had all these doubts. It was like he kicked me in the stomach."

"Our relationship was really strained at that point. We didn't speak for years, and Isiah knew why. He questioned me when I got my HIV diagnosis. How can a so-called friend question your sexuality like that? I know why he did it, because we used to kiss before games, and now if people were wondering about me, that meant they were wondering about him too."

The HIV revelations are among the most captivating in the book. The myriad struggles of Johnson had to deal with upon the diagnosis of a then-misunderstood virus were almost heart-wrenching.

In terms of calling out players, I was more amused by his thoughts on Kareem Abdul Jabbar:

"Thank God Kareem was my teammate, because I used to cringe at the way he treated people. There was a way to say no if you didn't want to sign an autograph...but Kareem didn't do it in a very kind way. Sometimes he'd have people in tears. It's hurt him now that he's done playing."

But for all the readers' hopes of dirt-dishing, the book is more a reflection on their thoughts throughout milestones and hardships in their careers, and their post playing careers - Magic Johnson Enterprises and Bird's coaching and executive roles. This includes a great few pages on Bird's relationship with Ron Artest during the fallout of the The Malice at the Palace.

To their credit, for all their collective bravado and rightful claims to having created the league's resurgence, the recurring theme in the book is their respect for the game, desire to be the best, and insistence that their teammates follow suit.

In follow up posts, I'll be publishing audio from a recent remote press conference where Bird and Magic talked with journalists and bloggers about When the Game Was Ours.

Here is a clip on why they now pushed forward with the project 30 years in the making.





Look for the following shortly:

ON THEIR RIVALRY & RELATIONSHIP
  • On playing the "Right Way"
  • A quarter a century later why they are still popular
  • At the height of the rivalry how did they honestly feel about one another
  • Recounting the joint ’85 Converse ad
  • Favorite memories against each other
  • Their relationship today
ON TODAYS GAME
  • What obstacles would they as players face today in light of changes in officiating and rules today?
  • Are players too close to ever have another true rivalry?
  • Thoughts on the coziness of players with one another
  • Are there two players in the league that might develop into a Magic-Bird type rivalry?
  • Biggest differences between today and their day

ON ISIAH
  • Magic refuses to take bait to elaborate on Isiah
  • What made him reveal the nature of the incidents that led to their parting ways?
  • Did Isiah’s personality attribute to his problems with the Knicks?

ON LAKERS/CELTICS
  • On today’s Lakers/Celts and their leadership
  • On Kevin Garnett in Boston.
  • Could the rivalry have happened anywhere but LA & Bos?
  • Would Bird-Magic have been as big in other cities?
ON PLAYERS
  • On LeBron / NYC
  • On Doctor J
  • On Brandon Jennings
  • Influence on AAU, Recruiting of Star Athletes.
  • 1 and Done rule.
  • Who today plays in the same style they did?
OTHER
  • Thoughts on the Pistons Back-to-Back Championships
  • Laimbeer as an NBA coach and Rambis’ hiring of him
  • On their versatile game and who influenced it?
  • Contributions of Role Players: Praise for Rambis, Cooper and DJ
  • On Kareem’s Coaching Prospects


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Monday, March 16, 2009

When March Went Mad: Interview with Author and CBS Sports Analyst Seth Davis

This month marks the 30th anniversary of perhaps the most pivotal event in NCAA and NBA basketball history. While the game itself was sub par by most standards, the legacy which followed helped reshape the pro and college games and ushered in a new era of televised basketball.

On March 26, 1979, Larry Bird's undefeated Indiana State Sycamores met Earvin "Magic" Johnson's Michigan State Spartans in Salt Lake City in what remains the the most watched televised basketball game in history.


Their equally uncertain and tumultuous recruiting experiences aside, their paths to stardom couldn't have been more contrasting, and as such, the Bird-Magic rivalry which ushered in an unprecedented era of hoops could, in many ways, have never come to fruition.

With ESPN still in its infancy, March Madness hardly a nationwide cultural phenomenon as we know it today, and the NBA a fledgling league struggling to appeal to mainstream America, the attention-shunning, but competition-driven, "Hick from French Lick" and the charismatic, camera-friendly and freakishly skilled 6'9" point guard from Michigan captured the country's attention throughout the ensuing decade.

The league and broadcasters learned how to effectively capture that attention and market sport around its superstars. The rest, as they say, is history.

This week, CBS analyst and SI writer Seth Davis outlined the lead-up to and the aftermath of the 1979 NCAA Championship Game in When March Went Mad: The Game That Transformed Basketball.


HuggingHaroldReynolds: Race plays a prominent role throughout the book. Many attributed the NBA's lack of popularity in 1979 to the notion that a white audience wouldn't care for a league dominated by black superstars. We hear a lot of those same arguments today. Yet the NBA saw a pinnacle of success during the Bird-Magic rivalry years. Does this bell-curve which peaked with Bird's stardom justify this argument?

Seth Davis: Looking back, I think this "problem" in the NBA was much more perception than reality. But at some point, perception becomes reality, so even if the problem of the NBA being "too black" was overstated, the fact that Bird was white definitely added to his allure. Even Magic Johnson recognized that Bird had more commercial value than he did. I don't think it took long for those stereotypes to fall. Bird may have been white, but he was a great basketball player. Magic may have been black, but "white America" loved him because he was so talented and charismatic. I really don't think we hear much about this today. I look at NBA stars like Kobe Bryant, LeBron James and Chris Paul, and it's obvious fans of all hues love to watch them play.

HHR: The book tells how the Bird-Magic rivalry and the ISU-MSU NCAA championship game transformed both college basketball (and the NBA), and ushered in a new era of television coverage and jockeying by networks. Yet, Bird could have been a garbage man in French Lick (or a Hoosier) and Magic could have been a Wolverine in Ann Arbor. How important were
the institutions and supporting casts in this legacy, compared to the individuals?

SD: We always say that no one player is bigger than the program, but I think these are two exceptions. Michigan State would have achieved a high level of success if Magic had gone to Michigan, but I doubt it would have won a championship. Remember, as great a coach as Jud Heathcote was, he never made it past the Sweet Sixteen after the '79 title. As for Bird, you're right, he could have been a lot of things other than a college basketball player, and therefore a future pro. One of the first things I learned that amazed me was just how close Bird came to never playing college basketball. If Bill Hodges, then an assistant at Indiana State, had done what Larry's mom, Georgia, told him to do ("Leave him alone"), then the world would never have gotten to see Larry Bird play basketball. Wouldn't that have been a shame?


HHR: Despite the unprecedented ratings, the championship game saw a lack of competitiveness and, by his standards, a poor performance by Bird. How were networks able to overcome the subpar performance by Bird and ISU in the championship game in selling the the potential of March Madness?

SD: It's funny, everybody knows about this game, but I think some people forgot who won. This game was significant not because of the way it was played, but because it WAS played. Now, there was a point there early in the second half when Michigan State was on the verge of really blowing things open. Greg Kelser picked up his fourth foul, and while he was on the bench Indiana State was able to trim the lead to six points. If it had ended up as a blowout, that could have really hurt the sport. The story would have been Magic, not Magic and Bird.

HHR: WaPo's David Kindred and Bill Rassmussen lamented the fact that there could never be another ISU - an unknown underdog who captures the country's imagination - because of the massive 24-hour coverage. How would you compare a BCS run by a Boise State or an NCAA tourney run by a George Mason, to ISU's season?

SD: I think they're very comparable. George Mason absolutely captured America's hearts when it reached the Final Four. Imagine how big that game would have been if they had won another game and reached the final! This is what made the '79 championship so noteworthy. Yes, you had arguably the two best players in the country, but it was still David versus Goliath. People might look for a modern-day equivalent and imagine a meeting between Oklahoma's Blake Griffin and North Carolina's Tyler Hanbrough in the championship, but that would be Goliath versus Goliath. The Cinderella story is the essence of the NCAA tournament's appeal, and this game was the first time that notion was brought to the modern audience.


HHR: Bob Ryan wrote in Basketball Weekly: "If Indiana State with Larry Bird meets Michigan State with Earvin Johnson in the finals and the result isn't the biggest TV rating for a college basketball game, then...we, the press, aren't doing our jobs..." With a lack of national coverage in the day, columnists played a huge role in showcasing regional talent. It almost contradicts the Kindred/Rassmussen argument. What, then, should be the role of journalists today - giving the public as much info as possible, or creating an aura of mystery and excitement?

SD: Let's face it, there's no mystery anymore, and as a guy who feeds my family by ruining that mystery, I'm the last to complain. We live in the Information Age, and so it's up to guys like me to feed the public's appetite for information. I understand the lament that the aura of mystery is gone, but I also love watching the Big Sky championship game on ESPN2.

HHR: How do you feel online basketball columnists and blogs play in advancing the sport? Any favorites you'd recommend?

SD: The more, the merrier. I am a consumer and a fan, first, so I always check blogs like Rush the Court and Storming the Floor, not to mention Deadspin. The better blogs frankly are the ones written by beat writers. I'm not so interested in what a guy sitting on his couch watching a game has to say about it. I'm more interested in someone who has done some hands-on reporting and can illuminate for me something that I couldn't see on television.

HHR: ISU/MSU held various events marking the 10th, 20th and 25th anniversary of the game. What sort of things can we expect to see this year with the 30th anniversary? What makes this year special compared to those other commemorations?

SD: You mean besides the publication of my book? Both of these schools held 30-year reunion celebrations this season, and if you read my book you won't be surprised to learn that they were much different. Only a couple of thousand fans showed up for the Indiana State game, and many of the players, including Bird, weren't there. Neither was the coach, Bill Hodges. On the other hand, Magic, Heathcote and all the Spartan were in Lansing for a weekend-long celebration that culminated in the Spartans' comeback win at home over a plucky Wisconsin team. I know there are going to be a lot of celebrations at the Final Four as well. The Final Four will be in Detroit, so there should be plenty of interested observers on hand. Wouldn't it be amazing if Tom Izzo and his Spartans were playing that weekend?


HHR: You did extensive research and conducted numerous interviews for the book. Can you share your favorite anecdotes about each players?

SD: I did most of the interviews over the phone (and many of those conversations lasted upwards of three hours), but I especially enjoyed my face to face visits with Heathcote and Hodges, which included watching the entire game with them. I also visited Mike Brkovich, a Michigan State guard, at his house in Windsor, Ontario, as well as ISU players Steve Reed and Bob Heaton. Those guys are real gentlemen. I'm always especially appreciative of people
who welcome me into their homes.

HHR: Tell us about your experience going from a local paper to SI and CBS, and ultimately to becoming a published author.

Hey man, I'm just getting started! Getting that job offer from SI was probably the most important professional moment of my life. I was working for a newspaper in New Haven, Connecicut, covering high school sports when I applied to a job at SI as a fact checker. TV wise, I got my big break at the 2003 Final Four in New Orleans, when CBS invited me onto their hourlong Sunday show to do a news and notes segment about impending coaching moves. They invited me to start doing halftime studio hits the following season, but I don't think they really knew what they were going to do with me. In early February, Tony Pettiti, who was then the executive producer of CBS Sports, casually said to me, "We're going to have you at the desk during the tournament." I honestly hadn't really considered that possibility. Believe me, I know how lucky I am.

HHR: What's in the works for Seth Davis?

Between my three jobs and my two kids, it's a very busy time for me. I'm just looking to get through the month of March, which I am enjoying thoroughly as usual, and then spend some quiet time with my wife and two sons. I love what I do and it has been a blast promoting this book, but being a Dad is what I do best, and I miss them very much. But I would like to do another book, so as soon as I decompress from the tournament, I'll start working on my next proposal. Stay tuned!


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