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View Full Version : Stay classy, LA Clippers


worzel gummidge
03-15-2011, 10:30 AM
An organization like the Jazz takes care of their people without having to self-promote it. Sterling not so much...
http://journaltimes.com/sports/bucks/article_efc79902-4ebd-11e0-8c1b-001cc4c002e0.html
Kim Hughes was in trouble, more trouble than he ever envisioned.

While working as an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Clippers seven years ago, Hughes was diagnosed with prostate cancer.

But Hughes was told not to worry. His doctor assured him the cancer was slow growing and felt Hughes could wait several months before undergoing surgery.

But Hughes had an issue with that. The Clippers were about to go to training camp and Hughes, a basketball junkie with a voracious work ethic, didn't want to miss a day of work.

"My doctor told me he would do the surgery in a couple of months and then I'd be off my feet for a couple of months," said Hughes, who played at the University of Wisconsin. "He said, ‘You know this is major surgery.' "

Hughes confided in Mike Dunleavy, then the Clippers head coach, about his dilemma. Dunleavy suggested Hughes consult with another doctor he knew and perhaps Hughes' surgery could be sooner.

Dunleavy's suggestion paid off. Hughes' new doctor, Stuart Holden, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, was receptive to doing the surgery the following week.

But then Hughes encountered yet another major obstacle.

"I contacted the Clippers about medical coverage and they said the surgery wouldn't be covered," Hughes said. "I said, ‘Are you kidding me?' And they said if they did it for one person, they'd have to do for everybody else."

When Dunleavy learned the Clippers wouldn't cover the cost of Hughes' surgery, he mentioned it to his players.

Several of them, including now Milwaukee Bucks forward Corey Maggette, Chris Kaman, Elton Brand and Marko Jaric, were taken aback by the news and decided to offer their assistance.

"Kim was one of our coaches and he's a really good friend of mine, too," Maggette said. "He was in a situation where the Clippers' medical coverage wouldn't cover his surgery. I thought it was a great opportunity to help someone in need, to do something that Christ would do.

"It shows your humanity, that you care for other people and not just yourself. Kim was in a life-and-death situation."

It was indeed a dicey time for Hughes. After a biopsy was taken, he learned his prostate cancer was much worse than he believed.

The cancer had quickly spread and was on the brink of moving to other areas of his body.

If Hughes had delayed the surgery, and if Maggette and his teammates hadn't provided the necessary financial assistance, Hughes doesn't know what would have occurred.

Well, actually, he does.

"Those guys saved my life," Hughes said. "They paid the whole medical bill. It was like $70,000 or more. It wasn't cheap.

"It showed you what classy people they are. They didn't want me talking about it; they didn't want the recognition because they simply felt it was the right thing to do."

Hughes said he will be forever grateful to Brand, Jaric, Kaman and Maggette. In fact, Hughes said every time he runs into any of them, he thanks them from the bottom of his heart.

Maggette said that was indeed the case, laughing how he has repeatedly told Hughes over the years it wasn't necessary.

"Kim thanks me every time he sees me; he does that every single time," Maggette said smiling. "I've said to him, ‘Kim, come on. You don't have to do that. You're good.'

"It just shows you what kind of person he is, to keep thanking me all the time for that. Like I said, it was just my time to serve another human being.

"I think if anyone on my team is in that kind of situation, I would try to help him out if I could. That's just the person I am. I was raised that way."

Hughes said Maggette's concern and generosity illustrate how sometimes people erroneously perceive others.

"Corey is perceived by some people as not being a good person because he seems to be aloof and arrogant," Hughes said. "But they don't know him. He's a good man; he's a great man.

"You can have all the money, all the success, all that stuff, all those so-called important things in life, but in the end, you're judged by what you did for your fellow man. Corey will always be an important part of my life. What he and those other guys did for me put things in perspective.''

RedRedemption
03-15-2011, 10:40 AM
That's cold. They'd ****ing let a man die like that just because they are too cheap to pay the bill? Kudos to the players; **** the owners.

A_3PO
03-15-2011, 11:23 AM
The kind of pub might cause Stern to move into action and free the Clippers from DTS. He is an embarrassment. Major props to Maggette, Kaman, Brand and Jaric.

apollo33
03-15-2011, 11:25 AM
I gained respect for Brand, Magette and company

The_Yoyo
03-15-2011, 11:27 AM
honestly Stern is always concerned about the image the NBA puts on yet he continues to allow Sterling to run the clippers as one of the worse organizations in all of sports from a business ethics and winning standpoint.

How soon until he forces Sterling to do something? For that matter the other owners should say something too they are being reflected upon poorly in this as well.

Carl Herrera
03-15-2011, 11:30 AM
Brand, Maggette, Kaman and Jaric: Robbing from the rich and giving to the needy.

ChievousFTFace
03-15-2011, 11:36 AM
Thank you for sharing that.

Warning-Sign
03-15-2011, 11:37 AM
Major props to Maggette, Kaman, Brand and Jaric.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/01/28/sports/28morey.1.600.jpg

Get it done Moreyyy. JK.

Metropolis777
03-15-2011, 11:49 AM
And this is exactly the kind of stuff that the Clippers are known for and why DeAndre Jordan will seek employment elsewhere come the offseason as will Blake Griffin, Eric Gordon, Randy Foye, Mo Williams, etc. as soon as they get a chance to leave.

professorjay
03-15-2011, 11:58 AM
As if we needed more proof that Sterling is a pathetic excuse for a human being.

crzyxballer03
03-15-2011, 12:00 PM
How do we know which of the other teams, if any, would cover a cost like that? I bet the Clippers aren't the only ones.

SunsRocketsfan
03-15-2011, 12:11 PM
How do we know which of the other teams, if any, would cover a cost like that? I bet the Clippers aren't the only ones.

this is a good point. Maybe Sterling never even knew about it or heard about his situation. I imagine Sterling doesn't make the Medical Insurance decisions. He most likely purchased insurance for all his employees and the insurance company decides what is covered and not covered.

Now it would be different if he approached Sterling for some help and he shot him down.

Carl Herrera
03-15-2011, 12:16 PM
honestly Stern is always concerned about the image the NBA puts on yet he continues to allow Sterling to run the clippers as one of the worse organizations in all of sports from a business ethics and winning standpoint.

How soon until he forces Sterling to do something? For that matter the other owners should say something too they are being reflected upon poorly in this as well.

I'm not sure it's within Stern's power to force Sterling out. Does NBA's constitution (or whatever establishes the relationship between the league and its teams) have a clause allowing an owner to be forced out for douch-baggery?

Economically, though, I think having a Sterling-type owner probably hurts the image of the league and its revenue. I am not how by how much, though-- most fans probably would still watch the Clips because they like Blake Griffin and Eric Gordon even if they dislike Sterling since they don't have to see the owner for the most part. On the other hand, George Shinn's shenanigans definitely hurt the Hornets and the NBA's standing in the Charlotte market.

JuanValdez
03-15-2011, 01:07 PM
He most likely purchased insurance for all his employees and the insurance company decides what is covered and not covered.

I'm always looking for a chance to criticize Sterling, but I think you're right; this story doesn't smell right. It seems unlikely that the Clippers are self-insuring, so it was probably an insurance company that shot him down. From the way the story goes, my suspicion is that this second doctor/hospital isn't in the network. He could have waited for the first doctor and been covered (though sounds like that would have been a bad move).

RedRedemption
03-15-2011, 01:10 PM
How do we know which of the other teams, if any, would cover a cost like that? I bet the Clippers aren't the only ones.

It's $70,000. That's pocket change for these owners. Besides... they could just help the ailing party and just sell it off as a huge PR stunt.

sammy
03-15-2011, 01:16 PM
Great story. Respect to these players. I don't care how much they make.

Jimes
03-15-2011, 01:18 PM
I'm always looking for a chance to criticize Sterling, but I think you're right; this story doesn't smell right. It seems unlikely that the Clippers are self-insuring, so it was probably an insurance company that shot him down. From the way the story goes, my suspicion is that this second doctor/hospital isn't in the network. He could have waited for the first doctor and been covered (though sounds like that would have been a bad move).

So you don't think this quote was true? Sounds like the organization had control over what would be covered and what wouldn't.
"I contacted the Clippers about medical coverage and they said the surgery wouldn't be covered," Hughes said. "I said, ‘Are you kidding me?' And they said if they did it for one person, they'd have to do for everybody else."

mig0s
03-15-2011, 01:29 PM
Respect to Maggette, Brand, Jaric and Kaman.

I wonder how much Kim Hughes makes though

CDrex
03-15-2011, 01:34 PM
I'm going to focus on the positive aspect of this story here and say that it was just great of those guys to do such a thing. It may just be one game's pay for most of them, but it is still nice to see athletes putting other people before themselves once in a while.

BleedRocketsRed
03-15-2011, 03:47 PM
honestly Stern is always concerned about the image the NBA puts on yet he continues to allow Sterling to run the clippers as one of the worse organizations in all of sports from a business ethics and winning standpoint.

How soon until he forces Sterling to do something? For that matter the other owners should say something too they are being reflected upon poorly in this as well.

Sterling owns the Clippers tho right. Does Stern have power to force him to sell the team?

tamericus
03-15-2011, 03:59 PM
Man, this is terrible. My Dad had prostate cancer, and if he didn't have coverage those bills would have been severely crippling. That was very honorable of those players, much respect.

da_juice
03-15-2011, 04:16 PM
Sterling owns the Clippers tho right. Does Stern have power to force him to sell the team?
I would think, since the NBA is essentially a franchise(similar to say McDonald's) and all of the teams are part of that franchise(similar to say each individual mcdonald's restaurant) so if the main company determines the individual franchise is incoorectly using their brand, then that individual franchise can be removed, not sure if they can force it to be sold.

clippy
03-15-2011, 04:24 PM
Sterling is a POS and should be exiled, but this article is misleading. The Clippers are a big corporation and big corporations have group insurance policies. Hughes wanted to go outside his network for his medical needs and that wouldn't be covered by their policy. This is the exact same way it would work for any of you employed at big corporations (and most small ones have it even worse).

This is more a shot at the American health care system than it is at the Clippers.

JuanValdez
03-15-2011, 04:44 PM
So you don't think this quote was true? Sounds like the organization had control over what would be covered and what wouldn't.


Yeah, I don't think it's true. Could be the coach doesn't make much of a distinction in his mind between the insurance company and the Clippers. he talked to the Clippers HR guy who explained why the policy was denying him, so he hung the blame on the messenger. Could be, I don't know. But, I don't believe him.


I would think, since the NBA is essentially a franchise(similar to say McDonald's) and all of the teams are part of that franchise(similar to say each individual mcdonald's restaurant) so if the main company determines the individual franchise is incoorectly using their brand, then that individual franchise can be removed, not sure if they can force it to be sold.

The difference in the analogy though is that McDonald's is a publicly traded company, so the franchisees have no power over corporate unless they own scads of stock. In the NBA, each owner has a vote.

bnb
03-15-2011, 04:47 PM
I think the story here is how awesome the players were.

We don't know who he spoke to in the organization about paying, but I doubt many organizations would have approved covering an out of insurance procedure when the doc had said he was OK to be on the waiting list.

Doesn't make Sterling any less classless, and the Clippers still suck.

kmav23
03-15-2011, 06:33 PM
kudos to the players...

TheChosenOne
03-15-2011, 07:23 PM
Pretty sweet deal from the players to cover the bills like that.

ComeBackShane
03-15-2011, 08:07 PM
That's cold. They'd ****ing let a man die like that just because they are too cheap to pay the bill? Kudos to the players; **** the owners.

Amen bro

Deckard
03-15-2011, 08:13 PM
It's an uplifting story about the players taking it upon themselves to help a fellow member of the organization. It also clearly shows that Sterling is a sorry excuse for a human being, but we've known that for years. The players involved deserve all the praise they can get, although they obviously aren't looking for it.

rockets934life
03-15-2011, 08:42 PM
Sterling needs a visit from the ghost of Xmas past...

http://fusedfilm.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/carrey-as-scrooge-firstlookm18-med.jpg

Present...

http://www.redsarmy.com/.a/6a01156f2c3287970c012876524fbb970c-450wi

And Future...

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_V2OSMQeJjc0/Sce7muhlb0I/AAAAAAAABIo/snXLv2gqsZw/s320/spacely.jpg

Jack_Garnett
03-16-2011, 03:54 AM
Just wanna say how selfish Donald Sterling is!!!