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Great Expectations Great Dissapointment for T-Mac

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by rocketsjudoka, Feb 25, 2009.

  1. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Contributing Member
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    This is an article on T-Mac from Peter Schrager on Fox Sports

    Great expectations, great disappointments for T-Mac

    It was the summer of 2003.

    Everything was hunky-dory in Hollywood between Lakers teammates Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, LeBron James was merely a high school wunderkind with an unknown future, and Seattle still had a successful NBA franchise with a booming fan base.

    That May, a young, eighth-seeded Orlando Magic squad — coached by Doc Rivers and led by a 23-year-old superstar bursting onto the scene — had a 3-1 lead on the No. 1-seeded Detroit Pistons in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs. That star — the uber-talented Tracy McGrady — led the league in scoring with a 32.1-points-per-game average during the regular season.

    Blessed with the physical gifts to conquer all things humanly possible on a basketball court, McGrady — a seven-year NBA vet at the time — was finally putting it all together. Long critiqued as unable to win the big games, "T-Mac" was having a first round few young stars had mustered before him. Carrying a young, undermanned squad on his wire-thin back, this was reminiscent of Dikembe Mutombo and the '93 Nuggets knocking off the No. 1-seeded Seattle SuperSonics.

    At that point, few would have argued the assertion that Tracy McGrady was on the very top of the basketball world.

    Prior to Game 5 of that now infamous Detroit-Orlando series, McGrady told reporters how great it was to "finally be in the second round (of the playoffs)."

    His Magic would go on to lose the final three games of the series by an average of 20 points.

    A year earlier, McGrady guaranteed a Game 5 victory over Baron Davis and the Charlotte Hornets in a first-round playoff series in which the Magic trailed 3-1. T-Mac slipped on a wet spot on the court midway through the first half, sat for the majority of the game, and watched as his Magic were bounced from the first round. Prior to a first-round series against Utah in '07, McGrady, now a Houston Rocket, told reporters, "If we don't win this series, it's on me."

    Houston lost in seven games. McGrady was nonexistent down the stretch.

    In truth, it became an all-too-common summer ritual. May meant Mother's Day, Memorial Day barbecues, and forgettable T-Mac first-round playoff exits.

    In all, McGrady has played in seven NBA postseasons. He's never won a playoff series. Along the way, there have been series lost to injuries, a nagging back that has haunted his whole career, trades, an endless string of family tragedies, and bouts with mental health courageously shared with the general public. There have also been empty guarantees, tear-filled postgame press conferences, and lots of waiting for one of the NBA's most perplexing characters to live up to his potential.

    With Wednesday's news of his decision to have microfracture knee surgery that will require him to shut it down for the rest of his 2008-09 season, McGrady's career takes another turn for the worse.

    Though he's somehow still only 29 years old, Tracy McGrady — once considered a potential heir apparent and future King of the NBA — is likely in the latter stages of his NBA career. He's played in more than 800 NBA games, logged more than 28,000 minutes, and has no doubt faced more setbacks and suffered more hiccups than several of his contemporaries along the way.

    A seven-time All-NBA selection still under the age of 30, McGrady is almost a forgotten piece of today's NBA fabric.

    He was not present, mentioned, or even thought of during last weekend's annual NBA All-Star Weekend festivities. When our country's best and brightest were putting together a team-oriented gold medal run in Beijing this summer, McGrady — arguably the most popular American player in China due to his connection with Chinese teammate Yao Ming — was not included.

    For a man that by most American standards is still in the prime years of his young adulthood, McGrady is a dismissed thought, a forgotten slice of the NBA's past decade.

    Fifteen years from now, the 2000s will likely be defined by Kobe, Duncan, Shaq, LeBron, D-Wade, and perhaps Chris Paul and Dwight Howard. McGrady, arguably the game's most dynamic offensive talent over the past 10 years, will sadly be an afterthought. An Alex English to Magic and Bird's 1980s. A Mitch Richmond to Michael and Hakeem's 1990s.

    But is it just to deem McGrady's career a "failure"?

    That's such a strong word, usually reserved for wasted talents and squandered dreams. Roy Tarpley is a failure. But T-Mac?

    Fragile? Perhaps. Conflicted? Maybe.

    But failure?

    Consider the positives. In 12 NBA seasons, McGrady's been an All-NBA selection seven times. He's played in seven All-Star Games, has won two NBA scoring crowns, and holds more than a half dozen Orlando Magic franchise records. He's signed monster contracts, put up huge numbers, and been a "Sports Center" mainstay with highlights that have spanned an entire generation.

    But then there are the negatives. He's 13-25 in playoff games, has never sniffed the second round of the NBA postseason, and was a loser in three straight first-round Game 7s during the prime of his career. Granted, in one of those Game 7s — a 2005 first-round battle with Dallas — he scored 40 points in a loss. But an L is an L. And though there are no "L"s in the word McGrady, his entire career can be summed up with the letter.

    In a league where superstars are measured with championships, McGrady has nothing but scoring crowns and Adidas advertisements.

    Perhaps it's his career — and not the squandered ones of Michael Ray Richardson, Jay Edwards, and the aforementioned Tarpley — that is the most tragic of all. McGrady's clean, has played the game the way it's supposed to be played for more than a decade, and possesses all the physical talent in the world. He just hasn't won. Ever.

    FreeDarko.com's Nathaniel Friedman, one of the authors behind 2008's The Macrophenomenal Pro Basketball Almanac writes, "While McGrady has frequently played on winning teams, his playoff track record is a study in Sisyphean despair" ... "Somehow, the high-flying, tensile McGrady never seems wholly invested in the catharsis of raw action. He's been called lazy, in part because of his vaguely preternatural walleye, baritone Florida drawl, and loose-limbed gait, and even at his most ferocious gives the impression of semislumber. But there's too much pop in that first step, in those dunks, in the way his threes rip through the net" ... "With McGrady, the lows had come to feel especially low and cavernous."

    Chuck Klosterman, purveyor of all things pop culture and a columnist for Esquire, notes, "For whatever reason, I always associate McGrady with players like Penny Hardaway and Shawn Kemp. They all seem like guys who everyone concedes were tangibly great, yet they all seem to lack some unspecified, possibly imaginary quality that allowed them to cross over into the weirder, more transcendent tier of intangible greatness. Obviously, McGrady's not a bust — but it will always seem like he didn't fulfill something (even though we have absolutely no reason to believe he had the potential to be greater than we've already witnessed). I can't think of any other modern players who you could be asking this question about — I mean, the guy averaged over 24 points a game for most of his career, but his life still seems ... unsatisfying."

    Lang Whitaker, columnist for Slam Magazine — a publication that placed T-Mac on its list of 75 Greatest NBA Players of All-Time in 2003 — explains, "I guess the only thing he's failed at is in reaching the potential we all assigned to him. We saw his athleticism, his shooting, his skill, and I think NBA fans just assumed that he was going to get more rings than J-Lo. But consider this: Even with all he's accomplished, he's still not even 30 years old. Assuming he recovers from this knee surgery, we might see much, much more from him."

    Whitaker's hope is one that isn't without precedent. As recent as two years ago, Kevin Garnett was in a similar "Out Of Sight, Out of Mind" world of fog that McGrady currently lingers in today. A trade to Boston, an NBA ring, and a few triumphant screams into the video camera later — Garnett's now viewed as one of the NBA's most complete players, if not its fiercest competitor.

    Prior to last season's championship run, Garnett had only exited the first round of the NBA playoffs once in his 14-year career. KG lost seven straight first-round series before reaching the second round. Perhaps McGrady emerges from his knee surgery stronger and wiser than ever. Perhaps he stays with Houston and wins with Yao. Or perhaps he leaves Texas for greener pastures when his contract expires in 2010 and wins elsewhere.

    Maybe we shouldn't start stenciling out the epitaph on Tracy McGrady's NBA career just yet.

    But as the league forges forward with marketing around Kobe, LeBron, Paul, and Howard — you can't help but think of T-Mac as a man in the rearview mirror; an afterthought in a decade where youth was king.

    If there was a book on the NBA in the 2000s, McGrady's chapter would be one filled with confusion and unmet expectations.

    Or he might not even get a chapter at all.

    Here's to hoping that won't end up being the case. Here's to seeing T-Mac return and put all of his demons to rest. Small steps first — successful surgery, full recovery, a first-round victory — and who knows, maybe even an NBA championship.

    After all, he's still only 29.
     
  2. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    A good read. Unlimited potential unrealized, a life filled with tragedy and disappointment, along with enough success to tantalize, the promise never fulfilled. Tracy gave us incredible moments and incredible frustration. I hope, somehow, he comes through this latest setback a better player and a better man. That would take a miracle. Maybe he's due.
     
  3. gwatson86

    gwatson86 Contributing Member

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  4. EssTooKayTD

    EssTooKayTD Contributing Member

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    A really nice read. It will be interesting to see how his career plays out, for better or for worse. I always imagined him being in KG's place where he would finally taste post season success, and just see him on the court letting it all out.

    That would be quite a story. An unlikely one simply because winning a ring is just that difficult.

    The more likely story is one where he'll be seen how he is now.

    He's obviously a very fortunate human being being blessed with such great ability and was paid very well for that ability. He's also been very unfortunate in losing loved ones, and in professional faliure whether his fault or not. I believe he is a competitor with heart because I see him in playoff post series interviews. He wants to win.

    This is the hardest test for him now. What he does from this point forward will decide how he's remembered. It's so appropriate now that his future is "on him."
     
  5. rocketsjudoka

    rocketsjudoka Contributing Member
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