There are short contracts. There are long contracts. And then there's the contract Magic Johnson received on June 26, 1981.
After just two seasons, Magic Johnson was already considered one of the most talented players the NBA ever had. It was that level of skill that granted Magic the the most extensive deal in NBA history, as Jerry Buss handed Magic a 25-year, $25 million contract to stick around with the Los Angeles Lakers.
The deal began in 1984, would have ended in 2009, and gave the Lakers' guard one million per season.
Johnson became just the third player to earn a million-dollar annual salary, joining fellow L.A. teammate Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Houston Rockets forward Moses Malone.
Though he had been given largest contract in the history of professional sports, Johnson was a long way from being happy. Only five months later, the franchise player asked to be traded and subsequently forced Buss to fire head coach Paul Westhead.
With the hiring of Pat Riley in Westhead's place, Johnson remained with the Los Angeles Lakers and helped them win multiple titles over the course of the decade. But by the time his contract became active, it was no longer the lucrative mega-deal that it was when he signed it. Players of all sports were now making $2-3 million a year, and his 25-year deal was preventing him from raking in the cash. He later renegotiated his deal and resumed make top dollar like everyone else.
A blog about sports history with some game coverage mixed in from the former Martinez News-Gazette sports editor, and beat writer for Unviersity of California Berkeley athletics, Golden State Warriors, Oakland Athletics, Oakland Raiders, San Francisco Giants, San Francisco 49ers, San Jose Earthquakes and the San Jose Sharks.
Showing posts with label Lakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lakers. Show all posts
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Los Angeles Lakers Sign Magic Johnson To 25 Year Deal
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Portland Trailblazers Initiate "Hack-a-Shaq"
On May 20, 2000, the Portland Trailblazers played against
the Los Angeles Lakers in a playoff game, but the big news was what happened to
Shaquille O’Neal on that day.
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Shaquille O'Neal (right) and Kobe Bryant (left) hug it out during Game 1 of the series with the Portland Trailblazers in 2002. |
For years, NBA teams had taken advantage of poor free throw
shooters by intentionally fouling them and forcing them to hit freebies. The
most prevalent form of this strategy was the "Hack-a-Shaq," named
after Lakers center Shaquille O'Neal. Shaq's 350-pound body was so strong and
so imposable that teams would occasionally wrap him up in an attempt to take
advantage of his weak foul-shooting.
Usually though, this type of intentional fouling was limited to only a few hacks a game. Never before had the Hack-a-Shaq technique been employed as a regular defense. Yet that's exactly what happened in Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals, when the Portland Trail Blazers visited the Los Angeles Lakers. Portland was so overpowered by O'Neal that they implemented the Hack-a-Shaq for the final six minutes of the fourth quarter. When it was all said and done, O'Neal had taken 25 free throws in under six minutes and made 12 of them. Overall, he finished with 41 points, 11 rebounds, seven assists and five blocks.
The strategy temporarily worked, as the Blazers were able to cut it to a nine-point game with just under five minutes left. But Shaq caught fire at the line and made seven in a row down the stretch. The Lakers won, 109-94, in one of the slowest fourth quarters in league history.
"Obviously, if we get down in a game, that's what we're going to do," said Portland coach Mike Dunleavy. "Had we scored a few more times, we would have put ourselves in position to win. He's a great player. I like Shaq a lot. He just can't make his free throws."
Many were furious at Dunleavy's decision, which had reduced the pace of the game to a crawl. But many coaches were intrigued. Putting a player like Shaq, who hit less than half of his freebies, on the charity stripe instead of letting him score wasn't all that crazy an idea -- at least in a desperate situation like the Blazers were in.
Just a couple weeks later, in Game 2 of the NBA Finals, Pacers coach Larry Bird took it to the next level. With his team getting stomped by Los Angeles, Bird had his team foul O'Neal on almost every possession in the fourth quarter. Shaq attempted a record 39 free throws in that game and made 19 of them. The Pacers were able to mount a slight comeback, though it wasn't enough to get them back in the game. Los Angeles won, 111-104. Shaq finished with 40 points and 24 rebounds.
Usually though, this type of intentional fouling was limited to only a few hacks a game. Never before had the Hack-a-Shaq technique been employed as a regular defense. Yet that's exactly what happened in Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals, when the Portland Trail Blazers visited the Los Angeles Lakers. Portland was so overpowered by O'Neal that they implemented the Hack-a-Shaq for the final six minutes of the fourth quarter. When it was all said and done, O'Neal had taken 25 free throws in under six minutes and made 12 of them. Overall, he finished with 41 points, 11 rebounds, seven assists and five blocks.
The strategy temporarily worked, as the Blazers were able to cut it to a nine-point game with just under five minutes left. But Shaq caught fire at the line and made seven in a row down the stretch. The Lakers won, 109-94, in one of the slowest fourth quarters in league history.
"Obviously, if we get down in a game, that's what we're going to do," said Portland coach Mike Dunleavy. "Had we scored a few more times, we would have put ourselves in position to win. He's a great player. I like Shaq a lot. He just can't make his free throws."
Many were furious at Dunleavy's decision, which had reduced the pace of the game to a crawl. But many coaches were intrigued. Putting a player like Shaq, who hit less than half of his freebies, on the charity stripe instead of letting him score wasn't all that crazy an idea -- at least in a desperate situation like the Blazers were in.
Just a couple weeks later, in Game 2 of the NBA Finals, Pacers coach Larry Bird took it to the next level. With his team getting stomped by Los Angeles, Bird had his team foul O'Neal on almost every possession in the fourth quarter. Shaq attempted a record 39 free throws in that game and made 19 of them. The Pacers were able to mount a slight comeback, though it wasn't enough to get them back in the game. Los Angeles won, 111-104. Shaq finished with 40 points and 24 rebounds.
Monday, March 24, 2014
Magic Johnson and Larry Bird Go Toe-To-Toe
On March 24, 1979, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird lead their respective teams to the 1979 NCAA finals. Magic’s Michigan State team would destroy Penn State by a score of 101-67, while Bird’s Indiana State would beat out DePaul 76-74.
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Larry Bird (back left) watches Magic Johnson (right) take free throws in their 1979 NCAA tournament game. |
Both Magic and Larry would have
outstanding games in their respective semi-final games. Magic registered
a triple-double, with 29 points to go along with his 10 rebounds and 10
assists, as he was nearly perfect that day going 9-for-10 from the field and
11-for-12 from the free throw line. As for Bird, he would narrowly miss a
triple-double of his own with 35 points, 16 rebounds and nine assists.
Michigan State and Indiana State would
go on to face each other in the NCAA championship game, as this would mark the
beginning of one of sports’ biggest rivalries.
![]() |
Magic Johnson (left) and Larry Bird (right) wait for a free throw shot in their 1979 NCAA tournament game. |
Michigan State has a chance to add onto their NCAA
Tournament resume this year, while Indiana State missed the cut.
Michigan State has compiled two NCAA Tournament championships
in 1979 and 2000. They were the Tournament runner-up in 2009. The Spartans have
reached the Final Four eight times including back-to-back-back appearances in
1999, 2000 and 2001. Their last appearance in the Final Four came in 2010. The
Spartans have also reached the Elite Eight 11 times, the Sweet Sixteen 17
times, including four straight years from 1998-2001. Overall the Spartans have
reached the NCAA Tournament 28 times, and is on their 17 consecutive appearance
this year dating back to 1998.
While Michigan State won the NCAA Tournament in 1979, and
again in 2000, Indiana State had never won the NCAA Tournament. Their highest
finish ever was in 1979 when Bird’s team lost to Michigan State. The Sycamores
have only reached the Final Four, Elite Eight and Sweet Sixteen once, in 1979.
They Sycamores have reached the NCAA Tournament four times
though in 1979, 2001, 2001 and 2011.
Saturday, March 22, 2014
Magic Johnson To Coach Los Angeles Lakers
On March 22, 1994, the Los Angeles Lakers announce that
Magic Johnson will replace head coach Randy Pfund, who was fired after
compiling a 66-80 record in less than two seasons. Johnson, only 34, had
retired in 1991 when he learned he was HIV-positive.
![]() |
Los Angeles Lakers great Magic Johnson (right) talking with James Worthy (left) after he was appointed to the head coaching position during the 1993-1994 season. |
Johnson discovered immediately that coaching wasn’t in his
heart. Things got off to a solid start, as the Lakers won five of their fist
six games under their new coach. But the Lakers closed out the season with 10
consecutive losses, the longest losing streak in franchise history, finishing
the season with a 33-49 record – missing the playoffs for the first time since
1976.
Not even a month after taking the job, Johnson announced in
the middle of April that he wouldn’t be returning for the 1994-1995 season.
Magic’s brief coaching stint ended with a 5-11 record,
however, Johnson became a part owner of the Lakers that summer.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Lakers Shaquille O'Neal Scores 61 On Birthday
On March 6, 2000, Shaquille O’Neal scores 61 points on his
birthday. Turning 28 years old, the Los Angeles Lakers ‘big man’ O’Neal scores
a career high 61 against the Los Angeles Clippers ‘on the road’.
![]() |
Los Angeles Lakers Shaquille O'Neal (left) backing down Detroit Pistons Ben Wallace (right). |
A side note of the story was O’Neal had asked the Clippers
to give seats for his family on his birthday, the Clippers denied his request
and O’Neal was forced to spend money to purchase seats for his family.
In 45 minutes against the Clippers, O’Neal scored 61 points
going 24-35 from the field, made 13-22 free throw attempts, pulled down 23
rebounds as the Lakers beat the Clippers 123-103.
O’Neal’s 61 points on his birthday, were the most the NBA
had seen any player score on his birthday, and the first 60-20 performance
since 1969, when Wilt Chamberlain accomplished the same feat.
O’Neal would end up winning his only MVP award of his career
that season.
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Wilt Chamberlain
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Wilt Chamberlain Scores 100
On
March 2, 1962, that Hall of Famer Wilt Chamberlain scored an incredible 100
points in a single NBA game. Chamberlain accomplished the feat while
playing for the Philadelphia Warriors in a 169-147 win over the New York
Knicks.
Wilt broke five records in that game:
points in a quarter with 31, points in a half with 59, field goals made with
36, field goals attempted with 63 and free throws made with 28. Only one
of the these records has since been broken, as George Gervin and Carmelo
Anthony have each scored 33 points in a single quarter.
A few years ago Kobe Bryant came
relatively close to the record by dropping 81 points against the Toronto
Raptors.
Chamberlain would go on to finish his career with 31,419
points, as he led the NBA in scoring seven times, field goal percentage nine
times, minutes played eight times, rebounding eleven times, and assists once.
Despite being such a great scorer, Chamberlain's main
weakness was his notoriously poor free throw shooting, where he has the third
lowest career free throw percentage in NBA history with 51.1% (based on a
minimum of 1,200 attempts). Chamberlain claimed that he intentionally missed
free throws so a teammate could get the rebound and score two points instead of
one, but later acknowledged that he was a "psycho case" in this matter.
He committed surprisingly few fouls during his NBA career,
despite the rugged play in the post. Chamberlain never fouled out of a regular
season or playoff game in his 14-year NBA career. His career average was only 2
fouls per game, despite having averaged 45.8 minutes per game over his career.
He had 5 seasons where he committed less than 2 fouls per game, with a career
low of 1.5 fouls during the 1962 season, in which he also averaged 50.4 points
per game. His fouls per 36 minutes (a stat used to compare players that average
vastly different minutes) was a remarkable 1.6 per game.
Chamberlain was also responsible for several rule changes,
including widening the lane from 12 to 16 feet, as well as changes to rules
regarding inbounding the ball and shooting free throws.
Chamberlain is most remembered however for his 100-point
game, which is widely considered the greatest basketball record of all-time. He
is also only one of two basketball players, the other being Michael Jordan to
have averaged at least 30 points per game over their entire career, but
Chamberlain is the only player to average over 50 points a game for an entire
season.
For his feats, Chamberlain was enshrined in the Naismith
Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1978, named one of the 50 Greatest
Players in NBA History, ranked no. 2 in SLAM Magazine's Top 50 NBA Players of All-Time and
no. 13 in the ESPN list "Top North American athletes of the century"
and voted the second best center of All-Time by ESPN behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
on March 6, 2007.
Chamberlain’s record would hold up for over 15 years until another former Los Angeles Laker, Kareem
Abdul-Jabar, would break his record. After Abdul-Jabar broke Chamberlain’s
record, Karl Malone, Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant have also surpassed his numbers, out
ranking Chamberlain to fifth as they are second, third and fourth respectively behind
Abdul-Jabar who is still the NBA’s All-Time leading scorer with 38,387 points.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
NBA Christmas Special
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
Most fans of basketball do one thing on Christmas, sit down
and watch the NBA games being aired that day. With such a special day upon us I
wanted to go back and look into the history on the NBA playing on Christmas
Day.
HISTORY OF NBA ON CHRISTMAS
The first NBA games played on December 25 came in 1947, a year
after the NBA's inception, when the New York Knicks beat
the Providence
Steamrollers at Madison Square Garden 89–75.
In the early days, regional proximity dictated most of the matchups
on Christmas Day. Teams would usually play their geographical rivals to cut
down on holiday travel and allow them to have more time with their families.
According to Dr. Jack Ramsay, coach of the
Portland Trail
Blazers from their only championship season of 1976–77 to 1986:
"Christmas meant being at home with the family and having a game we always
won. That was a perfect Christmas to me.”
Dr. Jack Ramsay has the most coaching victories on Christmas
Day, with 11, a record that Phil
Jackson tied in 2008.
In the early 1980s, after three straight years of memorable
moments involving the New York Knicks, including Bernard King scoring 60
points in 1984,
the most ever scored by a player on Christmas Day, and with the advent of
television, the NBA scheduled games over the holiday as a showcase featuring
the best teams and players.
The Knicks have played the most games on Christmas Day, with
47, and are 22–25 on the holiday. The Knicks' 22 wins are the most by a team on
Christmas Day.
Doc Rivers participated as a player with the Knicks in 1992 and as
a coach with the Boston
Celtics since 2008. Bryant
has played 14 games on Christmas Day, the most of any player and more than he
has on any other date on the calendar, playing his first in 1996, and
most recently in 2011.
FANCY JERSEYS
Many teams and players that have played on this day have
worn special uniforms and sneakers. Since 2009, the Knicks wear their third jersey, the
green/orange alternate which they first used exclusively for St. Patrick's Day
since the 2005–06 season.
During the game between the Heat and the Lakers in 2010, players on both teams
wore holiday sneakers, including lime-green Nike kicks on Bryant, Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom. LeBron James and
Chris Bosh wore
holiday-red shoes with garish green laces.
Since the 2008–09 season,
teams playing on Christmas Day wear a patch featuring the NBA logo inside a snowflake. For the 2012–13 season
games, special edition monochrome uniforms will be used. The uniforms,
colloquially known as "Big Color", was designed by Adidas.
This year the NBA will be wearing the new sleeved jerseys made by Adidas, the Adi-zero jersey's which the Warriors debuted last year.
MEMORABLE GAMES
The NBA playing on Christmas Day has featured some of the
most memorable games ever played, including Bernard King scoring 60 points for
the New York Knicks
in 1984, Patrick Ewing
helping the Knicks come back to beat the Boston Celtics after
trailing by 25 points in 1985, and again beating Michael Jordan and the
Bulls on last second jumper in 1986, Scottie Pippen's last
second block in 1994, the first showdown featuring Kobe Bryant and
Shaquille O'Neal as opponents in 2004, Phil Jackson becoming the fastest
coach to win 1,000 games in 2008, showdowns between LeBron James and
Kobe Bryant in 2009 and 2010, and the opening of the 2011–12 season
as a result of a lockout.
Rivalries
have also been showcased during games played on this day. During the 1990s,
each Christmas featured a game involving either the New York
Knicks or the Chicago Bulls, with both teams playing against each other in
both the Bulls championship season of 1992–93 and 1994, and
would have played each other in 1998, if there had not been a lockout.
The only year during the 1990s in which neither team played
on Christmas Day was during the Bulls first championship season in their second
three-peat, in 1995–96.
During the 2000s, the NBA showcased the Shaq–Kobe feud.
Since 1999,
each Christmas has featured games involving either the Celtics or
the Lakers, with the two teams playing on the holiday in 2002 and
every year since 2008 and facing
off against each other during the first of the Lakers' most recent back-to-back
championship seasons of 2008–09,
the first meeting between the two teams since that year's finals.
Today the Christmas NBA scene is set with five games this
year starting at 9 a.m. with the Boston Celtics and the Brooklyn Nets. The
second game of the day features the New York Knicks and the Los Angeles Lakers.
The third game features the two teams returning from last years NBA Finals as
the Oklahoma City Thunder face off in Miami against the Heat. The fourth game
sees the Houston Rockets take on the Chicago Bulls. With the 2012 NBA Christmas
Day finale being set up between the Clippers and Nuggets.
--
I hope everyone enjoys their holiday and watches some NBA
hoops, which could be historical.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Abdul-Jabbar's Streak Breaks
On Dec. 4, 1987, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar does not score in
double figures ending his streak of 787 games doing so.
Abdul-Jabbar is one
of the best to play in the NBA, he is the NBA’s all-time leading scorer,
with 38,387 points, an average of 24.6 points per game, and also bright in
17,440 rebounds, an average of 11.2 rebounds per game, and had 3,189 blocks in
his career, an average of 2.5 blocks per game.
During his career with the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers
from 1969 to 1989, Abdul-Jabbar won six NBA championships and a record six
regular season MVP
Awards.
On top of those
feats Abdul-Jabbar was also named the 1970 Rookie of the Year and was named to
the NBA All-Rookie team that year. He won two NBA Finals MVP’s in 1971 an 1985.
He was named an NBA All-Star 19 times, from 1970-1977, and 1979-1989. He was
named to the All-NBA First Team 10 times, and five times to the All-NBA Second
Team. He was a two-time NBA scoring champion in 1971 and 1972. Was the NBA
leading rebounder in 1976.
But it wasn’t just
his offense that made Abdul-Jabbar special, it was his defense too. He was
named to the NBA All-Defensive First Team five times, and the NBA All-Defensive
Second Team six times. He was the NBA’s block leader four-times during his
career.
After he retired
from the NBA Abdul-Jabbar no. 33 jersey was retired by the Los Angeles Lakers
and the Milwaukee Bucks.
In 1996, he was
named to the NBA’s 50th Anniversary All-Time Team.
Abdul-Jabbar was also well known for his trademark
"sky-hook", a hook
shot in which he bent his entire body (rather than just the arm) like a
straw in one fluid motion to raise the ball and then release it at the highest
point of his arm's arching motion. Combined with his long arms and great height
(7 feet 2 inches), the sky hook was difficult for a defender to block
without goaltending. It
was a reliable and feared offensive weapon and contributed to his high lifetime
field goal percentage of .559. As a twist, he was adept at shooting the skyhook
with either hand, which made him even more difficult to defend against.
According to Abdul-Jabbar, he learned the move in fifth grade after practicing
with the Mikan Drill and
soon learned to value it, as it was "the only shot I could use that didn't
get smashed back in my face".
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