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[FOX 26] Hakeem, Clyde Will Be Together Again

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by amorephd, Sep 2, 2008.

  1. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    Another proof that we need the WHO IS DREAM? thread.

    Hakeem loves this country so much that he applied for citizenship and became a proud American.

    His love wasn't for Nigeria, even though it was his home country. He was so proud to wear the Stars and Stripes at the Olympics!

    http://bbs.clutchfans.net/showpost.php?p=3854831&postcount=627

    Dream's Team
    In his debut on a U.S. national squad, Hakeem Olajuwon steps into the invaluable role of model citizen

    by Phil Taylor

    There is more truth in advertising than you might think. In a Visa commercial in which members of the men's U.S. Olympic basketball team are employed to plug the credit card, Houston Rockets center Hakeem Olajuwon takes the podium at a huge banquet for what are supposed to be Olympic basketball teams from around the world. Acting as host, Olajuwon announces that he and his U.S. teammates are going to "treat these guys for lunch." Mortified, one of Olajuwon's teammates, Chicago Bulls forward Scottie Pippen, whispers to him that he was supposed to declare that the U.S. squad would "eat these guys for lunch."

    Truth is, Olajuwon did not misspeak. The Dream Team, which begins its march to an almost certain gold medal tonight against Argentina at the Georgia Dome, is, in fact, on a dual mission in these Games: to demolish the competition and to do so in a gentlemanly manner -- in other words, to dominate but not celebrate, at least not in the unseemly fashion that some members of the 1994 edition of the Dream Team did. That squad won the gold medal at the world championships in Toronto but tarnished its achievement with taunts, crotch-grabbing and other demonstrations of boorish behavior. It was with that embarrassment in mind that C.M. Newton, president of USA Basketball and a former member of the Olympic selection committee, vowed that the Dream Team the U.S. sent to Atlanta would be a squad with "character, not characters."

    The committee made good on Newton's promise. The 1994 Dream Team, particularly center Alonzo Mourning and forwards Derrick Coleman, Shawn Kemp and Larry Johnson, was a glaring, sneering bunch, so defiant that Johnson proudly declared them the All-Principal's Office team. The current edition, with such solid citizens as Olajuwon, forward Grant Hill of the Detroit Pistons and center David Robinson of the San Antonio Spurs, is overwhelmingly populated with players so well-behaved they could be the Hall Monitor All-Stars. Membership on the '94 team was seen largely as an audition for this year's squad, but the only holdovers from two years ago are guard Reggie Miller of the Indiana Pacers and center Shaquille O'Neal, now of the Los Angeles Lakers.

    "I think the message is clear that the NBA and USA Basketball want to win and win big, but they want to do it in a certain way," says Robinson, who was also a member (with current Dream Teamers Pippen, forward Charles Barkley of the Phoenix Suns and forward Karl Malone and guard John Stockton of the Utah Jazz) of the original Dream Team, at the 1992 Barcelona Games. "It's not for me to judge other teams or other players, but I think that some of the behavior that might be acceptable when you're playing pickup with your friends isn't acceptable when you're playing in international competition in front of the world."

    Those are exactly the kind of words officials from the NBA and USA Basketball want to hear. "People ask if we have talked to these players about avoiding the kind of behavior that drew criticism in '94," says Rod Thorn, the NBA's senior vice president of basketball operations and chairman of the Olympic selection committee. "But if you look at the roster, you realize that we have the kind of players who don't need to be cautioned about that."

    This is the rare team whose standard of behavior may be set by a rookie, of sorts. The Nigerian-born Olajuwon, nicknamed Hakeem the Dream, became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1993 and is representing his new country for the first time in international competition at the Atlanta Games. In a sense, this really is Dream's Team. "These are Hakeem's Olympics in a lot of ways," Miller says. "He's the best player in the league who hasn't had the chance yet to wear USA on his chest. Playing in the Olympics means a lot to all of us, but I'm not sure anybody appreciates it more than he does. I'm sure that, in a sense, we're all going to follow his lead."

    For those who are concerned about the U.S. team's image, it helps that Olajuwon happens to be perhaps the most widely respected player among his peers for his dignity and sportsmanship. "Every team has a player or two who sets a tone," says U.S. Olympic coach Lenny Wilkens of the Atlanta Hawks. "If one of those players is Dream, as I expect it will be, then we'll be in excellent shape." If Olajuwon had not been held in such high regard, the NBA and USA Basketball might not have gone to the lengths they did to ensure his Olympic eligibility.

    Olajuwon played for a Nigerian junior team in the All-Africa Games in 1980 before coming to the U.S. and enrolling at the University of Houston later that year, and FIBA, the governing body of international basketball, has a rule that prohibits players who have represented one country in international competition from switching to play for another country in the same sport. A second rule states that an athlete who changes nationalities must go through a three-year waiting period after he officially informs FIBA of the change before he can play in international competition. Although Olajuwon became a U.S. citizen on April 2, 1993, he did not inform FIBA of the change until September of that year, which means the Olympics will begin before that three-year period is over. But more than a year of lobbying by the NBA and USA Basketball persuaded FIBA officials to grant Olajuwon special permission to play.

    "It is the most wonderful feeling," Olajuwon said after he was declared eligible. "It makes me feel like I have completed my journey. I try to imagine what it is going to feel like the first time I walk onto the floor wearing this uniform. I close my eyes and try to hear the music when they play the U.S. national anthem at the Olympics."

    Olajuwon's desire to play in the Olympics is the kind of story NBA and USA Basketball officials hope will humanize the Dream Team a bit and convince the public that they are not just a group of multimillionaires who interrupted their off-season golf schedules to mop up the court with the rest of the basketball world. The Games do mean far more than that to many of the players, especially guard Mitch Richmond of the Sacramento Kings, who as a collegian (along with Robinson) settled for a bronze medal as a member of the 1988 team that lost to the Soviet Union; Stockton, who played very little in Barcelona because of a broken right leg suffered a month before the start of the Games; and Hill, who had hoped to play in the 1992 Games as a collegian before the decision was made to turn the Games over to the pros.

    Still, it won't be easy for the players to avoid being seen as pampered prima donnas. They are housed at the Omni Hotel in Atlanta instead of in the Olympic Village with most of the other athletes, which USA Basketball officials insist is more of a necessity than a privilege. "The simple fact is that the Angolan runner can function in the Olympic Village better than the NBA player," says Craig Miller, USA Basketball's assistant executive director for media relations. "Sometimes that gets interpreted as elitism or pampering, but it's not. These players are such stars that they cause a major scene with autograph seekers and hangers-on wherever they go. Having the players stay outside the Village makes things run more smoothly for all involved." The players will be gently encouraged, however, to attend other Olympic events and to occasionally make themselves visible in and around the Village.

    Olajuwon will have more than enough help in setting a sportsmanlike tone for the Dream Team, not only from some of his teammates but also from Wilkens, the low-key but highly respected coach who holds the NBA record for most lifetime wins (1,014). "Lenny's not the kind of coach who has to yell at you to get you to play hard," says Malone. "He's more like a father figure. He makes guys want to behave themselves so he won't be disappointed in them."

    In the past some current Dream Teamers have demonstrated disappointing comportment. Miller, for instance, is a master of trash talk and the trash gesture. His placing of his two hands around his throat in a choke sign to film director and New York Knicks fan Spike Lee in the 1994 playoffs is legendary. Pippen is notorious for refusing to reenter a tied playoff game with 1.8 seconds left because the final play was not designed for him to take the shot, and he once threw a chair onto the court in a dispute with a referee.

    And then, of course, there is Barkley, the hands-down favorite as the U.S. player most likely to create an international incident. In one of the more memorable moments in Barcelona, the muscular, 252-pound Barkley elbowed slender Angolan forward Herlander Coimbra for no discernible reason. The bad news for Coimbra, who is again on the Angolan team (which plays the U.S. on Monday night), is that Barkley hasn't mellowed. "I'd hit him again, just like last time," says Sir Charles with a smile. "My way of saying, 'Welcome to the States.'"

    But Barkley realizes that such mayhem is less objectionable when it is done with a twinkle in the eye rather than a sneer on the lips. That is a subtlety some members of the 1994 Dream Team apparently never grasped. It was Kemp who grabbed himself following a dunk, and Coleman, Johnson and Mourning kept up a steady stream of trash talk while humiliating their opponents. Several teams didn't take kindly to the behavior of some U.S. stars. Johnson and guard Orlando Vega of Puerto Rico nearly came to blows in one game, and after a loss to the U.S., Australian forward Andrew Gaze expressed what undoubtedly were the sentiments of many teams. "I don't know if vile is the right word, or disgusting," said Gaze, who had been a standout at Seton Hall. "There should be at least some pleasure in playing the game, some dignity."

    But the U.S. players were unapologetic. "I didn't come here to make friends," Johnson said during the tournament. "I've got enough friends. We came here to kick some behind, and that's what we're doing. We're basically taking a lot of countries to school."

    But the rest of the NBA players may have learned the most important lesson: The Olympic selection committee has such a vast pool of stars to choose from that the troublesome ones need not apply. It is a foregone conclusion that every Dream Team's medal is expected to be made of gold. From now on, the members of those teams will be the players who treat the U.S. image as something equally precious.
     
    #21 tinman, Sep 3, 2008
    Last edited: Sep 3, 2008
  2. RKREBORN

    RKREBORN Member

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    My favorite pic:

    [​IMG]
     
  3. Precision340

    Precision340 Member

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    it's a damn shame Guy Lewis is NOT YET in the HOF.. :mad:
     
  4. cardpire

    cardpire Member

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    hey clutch, can we get a Hakeem Induction front page on friday?
     
  5. f_chowd0696

    f_chowd0696 Member

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    lol... at 5'10" I would look like a midget.
     
  6. desertfire

    desertfire Member

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    I just checked the ESPN programming information for all of their channels and can't find anything about the induction ceremony. Does anyone have some more specific information? Channel and time?
     
  7. Zboy

    Zboy Member

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    Too bad they are closing the building on Friday. I live 2 hours away from Springfield and would have definitely made the trip if the ceremony was open to the public.
     
  8. linvetb6

    linvetb6 Member

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    thanks i was actulyl askign my friends about that few weeks ago lol
     
  9. david_rocket

    david_rocket Member

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    on ESPN Classic Friday 7:30pm ET
     
  10. rubytuesday

    rubytuesday Member

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    i agree with this....going back to the "how old are you thread," you REALLY need to know the basics of who hakeem is to know the rockets. i say we make it a sticky!!! i'm so thankful i was born in 1979 in houston!
     
  11. sammy

    sammy Member

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  12. tinman

    tinman 999999999
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    dude some people are too lazy to click, here the repost

    Mario Elie on Hakeem Olajuwon

    September 5, 2008 11:03 AM

    The Dallas assistant coach is working hard today, helping the Mavericks prepare for next season. But Mario Elie's heart is in Massachusetts at the Basketball Hall of Fame, where his friend and former teammate Hakeem Olajuwon will be inducted today.

    Elie was nice enough to tell TrueHoop about his time playing alongside Olajuwon:

    I met Hakeem at the first practice after I got traded from Portland to Houston. I could tell right away what a good guy he was. He went about his business in a professional way. He was very quiet, but when you're on a team, you get to click with all of your teammates. He was our star.

    Off the court, he laughed and had fun. But once it was game time, he was focused, like a completely different person. I could count on one hand how many bad games he had during the time I was in Houston, and that's saying a lot right there. He played at an extremely high level.

    Hakeem was an amazing leader. Going into Islam and getting deep into his religion really helped him with his discipline and focus as opposed to his prior years where had some problems. He prayed five times a day. During Ramadan, he didn't eat all day (I think Shareef Abdur-Rahim does the same thing). The average guy had to eat and drink water during the course of a game. Hakeem got up at 5 a.m. to eat and then didn't eat again until after sundown.

    With an 82-game schedule with games starting at 7:30 pm, that's hard. But it never affected his game.

    He was our star, and guys counted on him every night to be that star, block shots, do what he did. He went out and did his job. He's "The Dream" -- he played hard whether he ate or not. It's a credit to his mental toughness.

    But he kept his religion very personal. He never approached me about it. He's very private and personal off the court. In our five years playing together, I may have seen him twice off the court. He was always in his hotel room. He wore his white gown, prayed all the time.

    I think soccer really helped him as a player. Dream is closer to 6-9, but played bigger than his height. He would play one-on-one with the guards, he's that amazing of an athlete. He could run, had a jump hook, jump shot, the total package.

    He doesn't get the credit he deserves as being one of the best centers of all time. I keep hearing people put Shaq in front of him, and that's an insult. Dream was an 85-percent free throw shooter. Shaq never led the league in blocks or won Defensive Player of the Year. It was a great time for centers, but the best of all those guys bar none, including Shaq, Robinson, Ewing, Alonzo ... it was Dream. He was just a little better than those guys.

    There's one memory from those days that really sticks with me. I always tell my friends this story. We were playing the Knicks in the Finals, and we were down 3-2 going back home.

    At the hotel, I was distraught, talking about how upset I was about the situation. Hakeem's hotel room was on the same floor as me. He and some of his Muslim buddies were cooking fish, smelling up the whole floor. I was so frustrated about the series, and when I walk out of my room, here comes Hakeem smiling like nothing had happened.

    He said, "Mario, don't worry about it, we're going home."

    He was relaxed as could be, it just it lifted my spirits and made me smile.

    The confidence this guy had in himself and our team raised us, it was amazing. I just smiled. In Game 6, he makes a last-second block, we win Game 7 and win our first title. I was amazed that whole summer after that end result. That will stick with me the rest of my life.

    Another time like that was when we were down 3-1 in Phoenix in the 1995 Playoffs. Hakeem was sitting next to me on the airplane. He looked over and said "Let's go surprise them." We ended up winning the series. It's his confidence that made him the man he was and is. That's what he did. When you look at him, he's a pillar of strength and you could grab on to it.

    This induction is amazing. I'm also a big fan of Patrick, he's a tremendous player and person. God is good. These guys battled in college, then in the NBA and now are entering the Hall together. I wish I could be there to support the guys, but Coach Carlisle is working me in Dallas. I'll have to call Clyde after and find out how it went. I couldn't be happier for Hakeem. He is a good man, and I love him.

    Basketball History, Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets, Mario Elie, Hakeem Olajuwon
     
  13. Landlord Landry

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    Ewing is wearing shorts at his induction..........what a tool.
    [​IMG]
     
  14. TMac640

    TMac640 Contributing Member

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    Hats off to one hell of a center :). Congrats Hakeem, it's about damn time!
     
  15. TMac640

    TMac640 Contributing Member

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    Doesn't Ewing look like a ****ing moron, lol.
     
  16. Zboy

    Zboy Member

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    Gold Club Price must have gone up for frequent flyer Patrick Ewing.

    Those shorts aren't even Gap. Looks like Old Navy to me.
     
  17. BrooksBall

    BrooksBall Member

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    You gotta be kidding me. Hilarious!

    It's like one of the "What's wrong with this picture?" things.

    He looks like a frickin' bum.
     
  18. baller4life315

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    What did he do? Roll out of bed after his 5,394,402th "rough night" at the local strip club?
     
  19. D-rock

    D-rock Member

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    If Olajuwon is closer to 6'9 than there's no way Ewing is 7 ft.
     
  20. longhornchampno

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    Hakeem is 6'10" and Ewing is 7'0".

    Why you can't see the 2 inches difference? Because Ewing is standing like a feet behind from the camera.
     

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