This is from the SacBee It's been 25 years since Kermit Washington's devastating blow crushed the face of Rudy Tomjanovich. Washington's life has never been the same. Maybe Shaquille O'Neal should take a note before he winds up delivering ... A life-altering punch By Jim Van Vliet -- Bee Staff Writer Published 5:30 a.m. PST Sunday, Jan. 27, 2002 Kermit Washington sat in his Portland, Ore., home earlier this month, watching the late edition of ESPN's "SportsCenter." He felt that familiar knot in his stomach as they re-ran pictures of an irate Shaquille O'Neal throwing a wild, menacing punch at Chicago Bulls center Brad Miller. Washington was relieved Shaq missed. Not a day goes by that he doesn't wonder how his life would have been different if he had. It's been 25 years since Washington nearly destroyed Rudy Tomjanovich's face with a devastating punch that Kings president Geoff Petrie still describes as the "single most serious event of that kind to ever happen in sports." A quarter century later, and the articulate, soft-spoken Washington still can't get a job in basketball. Twenty-five years ago, and he's still branded. "It's the way things are in life," Washington said. "I owned a restaurant for a while, and every day I must have been asked that question: 'Aren't you the one?' "Every time something happens in the NBA, they throw me up there. Everything in life is not fair. You live with the cards you're dealt. And sometimes, you live with the cards you dealt yourself." Washington was three years into a promising NBA career on Dec. 9, 1977. It was the night his life changed in the flash of a fist. Washington had been a GTE athletic and academic All-American at American University. Not only did he become one of only five players in collegiate history to average more than 20 points and 20 rebounds, he earned a psychology degree. At 6-foot-8 and 250 pounds, he defined the power forward position in the 1970s. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- He thought about becoming a head coach when he was through playing. He even considered a career in politics. Now, he'd just be happy if somebody returned his phone calls. The NBA was a dangerous place in 1977. There were 41 fights that season, and the league was being compared to the NHL. Teams talked of having "enforcers," basketball's version of hockey goons. Strong and aggressive on the court, Washington was regarded as a gentle, sensitive family man off it. But on a team that featured Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Washington was considered the Los Angeles Lakers' enforcer. And on an icy night in Houston, two weeks before Christmas, Washington earned the label. In a typically physical game, Washington found himself embroiled in a tussle with Rockets forward Kevin Kunnert when he noticed a blur out of the corner of his eye. It was Rudy T, who had sprinted from the Houston bench to break up the fight. In a moment of sheer instinct, Washington turned and crushed Tomjanovich with a vicious right hand that Lakers assistant coach Jack McCloskey called "the hardest punch in the history of mankind." Tomjanovich suffered fractures of the face and skull. His nose was broken, and he suffered a separated upper jaw, a concussion and lacerations around his mouth. He was leaking spinal fluid into his nose. In an article on the incident, Sports Illustrated reported the "bone structure of his face was knocked loose from his skull." Doctors compared the injury with hitting a windshield at 50 mph. Tomjanovich spent two weeks in the hospital while nurses and family kept towels over the mirrors to hide his face from himself. "When I was (in the emergency room), I wondered if I would ever play again," Tomjanovich said. "I thought I was gonna be the Elephant Man and have to be put away and, 'Oh, my God, look at the face on that guy.' " Tomjanovich recovered, won a $3.2 million lawsuit from the Lakers and went on to coach the Rockets to an NBA title. Washington was fined $10,000 and suspended for 60 days (a loss of about $75,000 in pay), and saw his career start circling the bowl like a deceased goldfish. He played with four teams over the next five years and retired in 1982 at age 30. And still, when a violent incident occurs in sports, they go to the videotape -- the "sporting world's Zapruder film," according to HBO's Bryant Gumbel. "Rudy was just a blur," Washington said after the punch. "Why did he have to run at me? I felt like I was walking out to my car and somebody tried to mug me. I couldn't sleep for the longest time." Not all of the basketball fraternity condemns Washington. Lakers executive Mitch Kupchak, who played for the then-Washington Bullets, said that if put in the same position, many players would have reacted the same way. "When you turn, and you see a guy roaring down on you, you have to fight," he said. Hall of Famer Wes Unseld calls it a "tragic and regrettable incident." But, at the same time, he believes Tomjanovich should have known better. "You must either break up the fight or you take the fight upon yourself," he said. "You have to be prepared for anything." Still, even thought it's a new century, that one night in Houston still haunts Kermit Washington. "I must have applied for 200 jobs from high school to the pros," Washington said. "It's not that they don't want me. It's they realize all the ramifications directed toward me. I'm still viewed as something negative." Washington settled in Portland after his retirement. He had a radio talk show for a while and nearly went bankrupt opening a sports bar in Vancouver, Wash. He still works out every day and, at age 50, says there is nobody stronger in the NBA today. He can still bench-press 400 pounds and even won a beer keg-toss at a Scottish Games a couple of years ago. He'd love to get back into the NBA as a trainer or strength coach. And though he knows the odds are slim, he says he's never been bitter about his plight. "My life would have turned out so much better," he said. "Then again, I might have stayed in L.A. and got run over by a car. I just kept working hard and believing things are going to come out right. "It didn't make me bitter, but it did show how others could keep me in my place." Gumbel reunited Tomjanovich and Washington on his "Real Sports" program last May. Rudy T said the only way he could move on was to "forgive" his assailant. For most, it was the first time we really got to know the real Kermit Washington, the man who established the "Sixth Man Foundation," offering a "new start in life for deserving people" of Portland. The man who single-handedly founded and financed "Project Contact," which provides medical supplies and care for underdeveloped African nations. He recently completed his 13th trip. He even auctioned off his Porsche to help finance the organization. "He's really tried to do some things for the people up there," Petrie said. "It's just a real unfortunate thing." The unfortunate thing is that one split-second mistake can alter the course of a person's life. "It'll be on my grave: 'The guy who hit Rudy Tomjanovich,' " Washington said. "And that's unfortunate. I don't think Rudy wants to be remembered like that, and I sure don't want to be remembered like that. "You know what, though? I wouldn't be remembered at all, good or bad, if it hadn't been for that. I guess it's my legacy." -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The whole story makes me just feel bad for the guy. One moments bad reaction effecting so much for generally ill in these two I believe good men's lives. I would really like to see or at least here about the realsports reunion.
I saw the gumbel interviews and the one thing that stood out is that while rudy says he forgave kermit, you still got the feeling that things were still real awkward. if i remember, i think they have only met once or twice since then and rudy said something like he has no reason to meet kermit. i even think gumbel once implied why not give kermit a job and rudy kinda responded cooly. i'm not saying that rudy came off as the bad guy, but he certainly wasn't the forgiving victim that many had hoped after watching kermits part of the interview....
While I do think Washington is sorry for what happened, I also can see why Rudy is not completely forgiving. I dont know how much I would be willing to let go from a person who almost ended my life.
While this has been rehashed ad naseum since the incident, I can't help but wonder .... why columnists/commentators keep bring up things like Kermit not being able to get a basketball job years after the occasion, or having his sports bar and several other buisnesses go under in financial ruin. Frankly unless he or someone else keeps bringing it up, it would have been forgotten or at least not referenced in the same light, a long,long time ago. At the time, Kermit was a second tier basketball player in a sport that was emerging into a profitable industry - both from a league/media/advertising standpoint and a personal financial bonanza from the player's standpoint. Professionally Kermit never rose above that because of a number of factors: the influx of new talent, expansion of rosters, expansion of the league, the profitability of advertising and the sale of league game rights on a regional as well as national basis. It is saner to say, or at least assume, that Kermit's talent never rose above that because he wasn't able to meet talent for talent. Or, he was never successful in business ventures because presumably he was not able meet the rigors challenge of business decisions. He may see it as his life having been changed drastically by his poor judgement twenty years ago. But I sure get tired of hearing how his shopping mall enterprises went under because a bunch of junior leaguers ladies wouldn't shop in his complex. or a bunch of roughnecks in the North Pacific wouldn't drink his beer while watching the NFL - all ... because he hit an opponent in a sports contest decades ago. It just doesn't make sense to me. I could easily understand why - a professional basketball player with a limited academic background (at the time) and a fair basket talent (at best) with no coaching or business experience - had a hard time attempting to accomplish the things he says were kept from him - a coaching career and busines success. Attmittedly the event in question hurt him, but not over a lifetime, when most opeople would not even remember who he was ... or what dastardly deed done cheap.
Rudy giving Kermit a job? Yeah right. Kermit just needs to go back to his hole in Portland and be forgotten. If he wants to stay out of the spotlight then he needs to stop returning phone calls to the media.
Please. "Icy night in Houston?" Whatever. When the hell has there ever been a real "icy night" in Houston? Moreover, the game was in LA. Plus, OP is right -- if Monica Lewinsky can sell tote bags, if Sony Bono can get elected to congress, if Ginger Spice can make a solo album, if Marky Mark can become a movie star, if Vanessa Williams can become a singer, if Bill Buckner can find a job, if Spree can land on his feet, if Rudy T can make the All Star team one year after getting hit, if Bill Walton can do anything, then I think KWashington can find a gig somewhere. There have been more discredited people on earth. Rick Barry cant get a gig, and he never punched anyone. He's just a wad, thats all. Rudy give Kermit a job? I can't imagine beating someone's face into oatmeal in my 20s, under any circumstances, and then coming back to them in my 50's as if they owed me any favor whatsoever. You can forgive someone without having them be your assistant freaking coach. Should Yoko Ono hire Mark David Chapman to be her butler because he got inappropriate mental health care as a kid? Screw that. If Gumbel feels so damn bad, why not hire him a correspondent... Sorry Kermit. Good luck. You should not have bashed my childhood idol's face in, but good luck with all your "peacemaking" endeavors in the future. CBFC
Hold on, let me get something straight. Was Rudy running to break up the fight or to attack Kermit? Or maybe nobody knows?
I don't know. I honestly feel sorry for Washington, but then I keep thinking...this guy ruined a 5-time All-Star's career. Yeah, yeah, it happened in a split second, it was bad judgement, ect. I used to really feel sorry for Kermit...until I read Rudy's autobiography. Everything that he went through...he said that when the were wheeling him into the locker room in LA, he saw Kermit and yelled, "Why'd you have to sucker punch me?! Why can't we just square off like men?!" They jumped each other and had to be broken up. That Rudy T. is one tought cookie, I tell you. As much pain as it causes to read about one's social and economic demise, puching someone never solves anything. I understand it was just Kermit's instinct, but I just feel it wasn't Rudy's fault at all. I've watched that video over and over and over, and Rudy absolutely was not headed over to fight.
A few comments, first I don't think Rudy and Kermit faced off after the game cause Rudy was not on the planet at the time and needed to be in the hospital not fighting some more, second I do believe Rudy intended to break up the fight, third I believe the article mentioned Kermit was an academic all-american so we're not talkin about a dumb jock here, 4th Rudy was in an all-star year but never got back to all-star form again and rode out a couple more years mostly on the bench, and lastly it would be a nice gesture maybe to hire the guy but I think it would be real akward and Tony Falsone probably still deserves his job. All I can say is it shouldn't have happened but the guy deserves to be forgiven for his mistake after all this time. Maybe next time a team in the NBA needs a strength and conditioning coach Rudy might call them up and suggest Kermit. I don't know but it just seems this is a good guy who made a bad mistake and should be allowed back into the public's good graces. I am proud of Rudy for forgiving the guy seeing as how badly he was hurt and how his career was basically prematurely ended. The one thing that would make me prouder is if Rudy helped support and promote Project Contact and got Mutumbo together with Washington and really worked at helping the people of Africa.
Actually we do know that Rudy wasn't running to attack Kermit. If Rudy was running to attack Kermit he would have slowed down by the time he got to Kermit. That way he could have thrown punches or whatever. Instead part of the reason the blow was so devastating is that Rudy was running full speed into the punch.
Same here. Somehow, I've never caught that video. Hell, it took me until about a month ago to see Shaq tearing down the backboard. Somebody throw us a frickin' bone here.
Your post was hilarious, but this part was off. Vanessa Williams was an award winning singer before she became an actor. And even top notch critics have complimented her on her work in both fields.
Maybe Kermit could get into boxing? He's younger than Foreman and he benches 400 pounds. Or is he a pacifist?
Re: Vanessa Williams Maybe she can sing, maybe she can act. Not the point. The point is, she was humiliated when she was Miss America for having raunch photos appear in Penthouse. She was talk of the water cooler for awhile, but re-emerged as a singer, actress, Rick Fox's wife. Luckily, the rest of the world became much more skanky, making her appear relatively normal rather than massively slutty. Still, she has a huge Entertainment Tonight-ish blotch on her resume -- being married to Rick Fox -- but she can still get a job. Kermit should be inspired by her reslience. CBFC
Again why. This isn't Rudy's foundation or anything. He can give his money to whomever he pleases and he sure doesn't need to promote this just cuz it's kermit. if it was real important to him, maybe so, but he probably has other priorities. and i sure don't get why rudy would be the middle guy between kermit and dike. kermit knows of dike's work i'm sure, if he had wanted to get with him i'm sure he would've tried by now and doesn't need anyone else's help. also, i've seen clips but they are always very far away and the punch never looks that devastating. maybe i should check morpheus. or maybe i don't wanna see how bad it was.