Thursday, May 19, 2022

J-Speaks: The Passing Of An NBA Hall of Famer and Ambassador

 

Earlier this month, the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the basketball community at larger, specifically in the Motor City and “The Deer District” suddenly said goodbye to was one of the best to ever play on the floor and. Following his playing career.  Built his own advertising promotions business and then worked for the NBA as a special assistant to the current NBA Commissioner and his former late boss.

On May 10, Hall of Famer Bob Lanier, who played 14 seasons with the Detroit Pistons and Milwaukee Bucks from 1970-84 passed away from bladder cancer, which he has battled since 2019, according to “The Athletic.” He was 73 years old and is survived by his former second wife Rose and their five children Walter “Jack,” Kimberly, Tiffany, Robert III, and Khalia, and seven grandchildren.

In the wake of his passing, Mr. Lanier has received many tributes from his NBA family, especially from the two organizations he played for and who have his No. 16 jersey hanging in the rafters of Little Caesars Arena and Fiserv Forum respectably.

In a statement on Twitter by the Pistons @Detroit Pistons, “The Detroit Pistons organization is deeply saddened by the passing of Bob Lanier, a true legend who meant so much to the city of Detroit and to generations of Pistons fans. As fierce and as dominant as Bob was on the court, he was equally kind and impactful in the community. As an ambassador for both the Pistons organization and the NBA, he represented our league, our franchise and our fans with great passion and integrity.”

Current NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement about the eight-time All-Star selection that besides being one of the most talented centers to every play on NBA hardwood that what he accomplished off the floor went far beyond what he did on the floor.

“Bob Lanier was a Hall of Fame player and among the most talented centers in the history of the NBA, but his impact on the league went far beyond what he accomplished on the court,” Commissioner Silver said.  

“For more than 30 years, Bob served as our global ambassador and as a special assistant to David Stern and them me, traveling the world to teach the game’s values and make a positive impact on young people everywhere.”

“It was a labor of love for Bob, who was one of the kindest and most genuine people I have  ever been around. His enormous influence on the NBA was also seen during his time as President of the National Basketball Players Association, where he played a key role in the negotiation of a game-changing collective bargaining agreement.”

“I learned so much from Bob by simply watching how he connected with people. He was a close friend who will miss dearly, as will so many of his colleagues across the NBA who were inspired by his generosity. We send our deepest condolences to Bob’s family and friends.”  

After leading his University of St. Bonaventure Bonnies, who retired his No. 31 jersey to the Final four, Mr. Lanier was drafted No. 1 overall by the Pistons in the 1970 NBA Draft, where he would play his first 10 NBA seasons, making the All-Star team in seven of those eight seasons behind averages of 22.7 points and 11.8 boards on 50.8 percent from the field.

Fellow Hall of Famer Dave Bing, Lanier’s teammate with the Pistons from 1970-75 said in a statement released by the Pistons, Mr. Bing said how “unfortunate” to hear about the passing of the 1971 All-Rookie First-Team selection and 1974 All-Star Game MVP.

“I have many great memories of Bob, both as a teammate and as a friend. I was lucky to have played with him as a member of the Pistons and to have shared a long-lasting friendship. Bob will be greatly missed,” the former Detroit Mayor (D) said of the 1978 J. Walter Kennedy Award recipient.

The Bucks, who Mr. Lanier averaged 13.5 points and 5.9 rebounds on 54.1 percent shooting from 1980-84, where he earned his final All-Star selection in 1982 in a statement praised him for his contributions on and off the hardwood saying, “Bob Lanier was an all-time great Milwaukee Buck and a Hall of Famer, whose retired No. 16 hangs in the rafters at Fiserv Forum.”

“But even more than this basketball success, which included his being an All-Star in 1982, Bob was one of the most popular players with Bucks fans and known throughout the community for his generosity and kindness. We send our deepest condolences to Bob’s family and friends.”

Lanier was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1992 and his large sized shoes got their first where they displayed of his bronzed kicks in a shrine.

He was known for wearing a size 22 sneaker, which was disputed in 1989 by a Converse representative, who told The Atlanta Journal Constitution that Lanier wore a size 18 ½ shoe.

“The 22 he was reputed to wear was a Korean size,” Converse shoe rep Gary Stoken said then. “A lot of people can put both feet into one of my shoes,” Lanier told HOOP magazine.

Lanier was born on Sept. 10, 1948, his basketball stardom began at St. Bonaventure, where he averaged 27.6 points and 15.7 rebounds in his three seasons. The Bonnies reached the Final Four in 1970, but Lanier injured his knee in the regional final and they lost in the national semis to Jacksonville University.

Lanier during his 14 NBA seasons had to overcome a plethora of injuries to his feet, shoulder, back, elbow, hand, and toe.

At his best, Mr. Lanier had an all-around came where he could score from the inside as well as make perimeter shots from the outside. He also was one of the best rebounders in NBA history and his hook shots was just as lethal as a guy he competed against many times in the 1970s Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who is well known for his famed sky hook shot.

“Guys didn’t change teams as much, so when you were facing the [Chicago] Bulls or the Bucks or New York [Knicks], you had all these rivalries,” Mr. Lanier told NBA.com back in 2018. “Lanier against Jabbar! Jabbar against Willis Reed! And then [Wilt] Chamberlin, and Artis Gilmore, and Bill Walton! You had all these great big men and the game was played from the inside out.”

Even as great as Lanier was individually, those Pistons teams managed to win just one postseason series with him and he just 64 games or fewer in his last four full seasons with the Pistons as the aforementioned injuries caught up with him.

Lanier was dealt from the Pistons to the Bucks on Feb. 4, 1980, for Kent Benson and a 1980 First Round pick, which the Pistons used to select current assistant coach with the Los Angeles Clippers Larry Drew.

In Lanier’s five seasons with the Bucks under Hall of Fame head coach Don Nelson and playing alongside Bucks legends in Marques Johnson, Sidney Moncrief, Quinn Buckner, Junior Bridgeman, and Dave Cowens, they won the then Midwest Division title each of those five seasons. They advanced as far as the Eastern Conference Finals in 1983 and 1984, the final two seasons of Lanier’s career.

“I wanted the trade,” Lanier said of being dealt to the Bucks. “I got to Milwaukee…and the people gave me a standing ovation and really made me feel welcome. It was the start of a positive change. I just wish I had played with that kind of talent around me when I was young. But if I had Marques and Sidney and all of them around me? Damn.”

Lanier in his last seasons in the NBA served as the President of the Players’ Union, with Commissioner Silver saying Mr. Lanier played “a key role in the negotiation of a game-changing collective bargaining agreement [CBA].”

Mr. Lanier was the Pistons career leading scorer and rebounder before being passed by fellow Hall of Famer and current NBATV studio analyst Isiah Thomas and fellow teammate the Pistons back-to-back title teams in 1989 and 1990 Bill Laimbeer, the former WNBA head coach of the Detroit Shock, New York Liberty, and Las Vegas Aces. Lanier’s single-game franchise record of 33 boards, which was topped by fellow Hall of Famer Dennis Rodman.

In 1995, Lanier was an assistant coach for the Golden State Warriors, taking over on an interim basis that season after his former head coach with the Warriors Coach Nelson re-signed. Lanier went 12-25 the final 37 games of that season and the Warriors moved on from him.

In the early stage of his post NBA career as a player, Mr. Lanier began the NBA’s “Stay in School” campaign as well as participated in “The Association’s” other outreach programs.

“There’s so much need out there,” Lanier said. “When you’re traveling around to different cities and different countries, you see there are so many people in dire straits that the NBA can only do so much. We make a vast difference, but there’s always so much more to do.”

The “Inside the NBA” TNT crew of Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith and Hall of Famers Charles Barkley and Shaquille O’Neal paid their respects to Mr. Lanier starting with Ernie Johnson calling him a “nice man.” “A great ambassador for the game of basketball.”

Johnson said he has fond memories of Mr. Lanier as the ambassador of the league at NBA Cares events and saw the joy Lanier at those events whether it was at a children’s hospital or at a school.

“He was in his element,” Johnson said of Lanier during his work as the NBA’s Ambassador. “He got a lot of joy out of life. That’s why it hurts us tonight to pass on that news. Bob Lanier passing at the age of 73.”  

One of the first things that jumped out about Lanier for Johnson was as a kid he watched him play at St. Bonaventure and they made a big deal about his shoe size of 22. Then when he first met O’Neal back in 1989, the first thing that came to his mind after seeing all the stuff that he had that he might wear a bigger size shoe than Mr. Lanier.

Barkley said when he drafted into the NBA in 1984 by the Philadelphia 76ers got to know him really well. In recent years while living in Phoenix, AZ Barkley and Lanier played a lot of gold together.

“That man is the epitome of ‘gentle giant,’” Barkley said. “Always in a good mood…But just a wonderful man. He will be missed.”

“Guys like him, Clifford Ray, Oscar Robertson, Jerry West, [Earvin] “Magic” Johnson, Vinny Johnson. Just really great older players who were just nice men.” ]

Barkley also included in that select group of legends in NBA that were true gentlemen in Wayne Embry, Bill Russell, and Abdul-Jabbar. Those men Barkley said those men that did not make the millions that NBA players today make.

“So, every time I see one of the older guys, I just always say, ‘Thank you, man,’ because if it wasn’t for those guys, we wouldn’t be in the position we are today,” Barkley said.  

O’Neal said that he did not really understand the history of the game of basketball until he got into the NBA when he was drafted in 1992 by the Orlando Magic. He was introduced the professional game of basketball by watching the 1979 film “The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh,” that stared fellow Hall of Famer Julius “Dr. J” Erving, who he said became his favorite player. Then it was the aforementioned “Magic” Johnson and then fellow Hall of Famer Patrick Ewing during his college days at Georgetown.

When O’Neal made his first All-Star Game in 1992 in Salt Lake City, UT he brought his late father Sgt. Phil Harrison with him and while walking through the tunnel of then Delta Center, Sgt. Harrison pointed out Mr. Lanier when they saw.

O’Neal at first was like who, which upset his dad and gave him an elbow check and said to him, “That’s Bob Lanier. One of the greatest big men.”

What amazed O’Neal is that the NBA legends knew his name. After Sgt. Harrison gave him a brief history lesson on Mr. Lanier, he made sure to see him at every All-Star Game and each interaction wonderful.

O’Neal recalls one time when the two had an interaction, Lanier said to him that he liked the sneakers he was wearing and said that he wears a size 22. O’Neal said that he owns the company and that he could get him pair of those shoes, and he would always send him the latest pair of kicks as well as dress shoes.

“Again me, coming where I come from, like when I see these legends and they’re like ‘Shaq, I like your game.’ I was like, ‘You know me,’” O’Neal said about his interactions with some of the best to ever play NBA. “He [Mr. Lanier] was a great man. He really was.”

Smith, who won two NBA titles with the Houston Rockets in 1994 and 1995 memory of Lanier was one of his coaches growing up had Lanier’s sneaker in his office and every time Smith would go into his coach’s office seeing that shoe would bring to mind Lanier.

Smith saw first-hand some of Lanier’s great work as the official ambassador of the NBA traveling with him to China and across the United States and the globe doing NBA events.

“Just a good person,” Smith said of Lanier. “You meet some guys in this league and you say, ‘He’s a good player, but he rubs you the wrong way. No, not Bob.”

 In his 14 NBA seasons on the hardwood for the Detroit Pistons and Milwaukee Bucks, Bob Lanier was one of the best centers in the league that held is own against some of the more recognized and well-known tall figures to ever lace up kicks on the hardwood like Willis Reed, Bill Walton, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and Artis Gilmore. He became a fixture in both of those communities both on the court and through his charitable endeavors off of it.

After his playing career, became a great businessmen and then had a solid career working in the NBA front office alongside first the late NBA Commissioner David Stern and then his predecessor Adam Silver in helping to grow the game of basketball not just here in the United States but across the globe teaching as Commissioner Silver said the game of basketball’s “values” and making a “positive impact” on the youth and all people “everywhere.”

Bob Lanier was great player, teammate, friend, and leader that earned the respect and admiration from the entire NBA family and he will be sorely missed.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 5/11/2022 12:30 a.m. “Inside the NBA,” presented by Kia TNT With Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal; 5/14/2022 www.nba.com story, “Hall of Famer, NBA Global Ambassador Bob Lanier Dies at 73;” https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/l/laniebo01.html; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Lanier.

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