Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
With his performances in the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament, Kevin Love cemented his inclusion in the discussion of great UCLA centers. Of course, that discussion includes Hall of Famer Bill Walton and begins with the greatest college basketball player of all time, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
This month in SLAM Magazine , Dave Zirin reminds us that Kareem - then known as Lew Alcindor - was more than just a great player on the court. He was also a brave and principled man off the court.
Though all of our focus is on the upcoming game with Western Kentucky, we pause a moment to reflect on our championship legacy and the great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
~~~

SLAM Magazine does many things well and a few not so well.
One of the best things they do - or have - or whatever - is run Dave Zirin's brilliant Louder Than a Bomb Column. Zirin - a journalist, author, blogger - writes about hoops and culture. His work, like his book about Muhammad Ali , takes no prisoners, offering smart (street smart, intellectual smart, just plain smart), tough takes about life and sport.
Unfortunately, one of the things SLAM doesn't do so well is get their website in line with their print magazine. Both are a worthwhile read, but (I'll get to the friggin' point now) Zirin's column is either non-existent online or so hard to find it might as well be.
Which makes it tough to blog about, since blogging sort of has a link-to-the-story mandate.
So, I've never blogged about Zirin before.
This time is different.
In the May 2008 issue (SLAM has a problem with dates, too, since it's only March 22 and I've had the issue for a week) Zirin's Louder Than a Bomb column is about one of Bruins Nations' own, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
The column is titled, The Weight. It begins like this:
Zirin's piece continues, outlining the OPHR's goals. My own disinterest in typing out the entire article (remember: no link that I can find) - not to mention some pesky copyright laws preclude me from presenting the whole story. In a nutshell, the organization's mission was to not allow the United States to exploit "a few so-called Negroes" in the Olympics, only to have them return to a nation that oppresses them due to the color of their skin. There's much made of race traitors and racist whites.
Zirin continues:
DZ writes that Alcindor spoke at the first OPHR conference and that the UCLA student recounted how even though he was a big basketball hero, he was almost shot and killed by a racist cop in Harlem during the summer. Zirin reveals that the boycott fell apart and that is why our memory of those games is that of Lee and Smith standing on the victory platform, with their black-gloved fists raised during the playing of the U.S. national anthem.
But the man who would eventually change his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar stuck with his principles and refused to play in Mexico City - Zirin says that Lee and Smith had "a 7-2 ally standing with them." Kareem would, as we all know, would go on to become one of the greatest, maybe the greatest, NBA player of all time, with a fistful of World Championship rings, a mantel full of MVP trophies and more points than anyone else ever scored. The four-letter-network recently named him the greatest college basketball player of all time. He's now an author of history books (his latest is called On The Shoulders of Giants: My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissance.
Zirin concludes with this, a sentiment I couldn't express better myself:
~~~
Keep your browser aimed at Bruins Nation all week for our continuing coverage of the Bruins quest for Banner 12.
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Comments
Thank You So Much, Achilles
I have a large photo of him on my office wall, circa '66, purchased for me by my husband because he knows that I have admired him for most of my life as an example of strength, skill, bravery, and most of all, intelligence.
A tmely piece about this amazing person--thank you, again.
by Bruingirl83 on Mar 25, 2008 4:29 PM PDT 0 recs
Kareem and UCLA
On the lighter side of things--anyone see him on the Colbert Report last week? Absolutely RANDOM cameo in which he plays Colbert's stage manager. Gotta love it!
by jjreicher on Mar 25, 2008 7:59 PM PDT 0 recs
Re: SLAM mag
I think SLAM is the best print publication on basketball. They have even better content on the web. A few years ago I came across the blog of one of their columnists (now become their editor I guess), Lang Whitaker. It's called THE LINKS and it still exists today. IMO he's one of the most thoughtful yet entertaining writers out there. I just finished reading this..check it out http://slamonline.com/online/2008/03/links-the-greatest-basketball-player-in-the-world/
And last time I checked they have a review on the UCLA dynasty video. I'll find it and post it here.
As for the print and web not in sync, well if everyone can get the content on the web, why sell the mag?
by lildre on Mar 25, 2008 8:09 PM PDT 0 recs
Incredible photo...
by bizzybruin05 on Mar 25, 2008 8:49 PM PDT 0 recs
Kareem
Funny story, but a wonderful wonderful person. Absolutely the greatest college basketball player ever.
by lolwtferic on Mar 25, 2008 8:53 PM PDT 0 recs
One more thing.
Um, rewind a day or two back, Mr. Davis. Apparently, WWL lives in a world were opinion is a day to day matter.
by lolwtferic on
Mar 25, 2008 9:45 PM PDT
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Great story Achilles
by Ajax on Mar 25, 2008 10:33 PM PDT 0 recs
UCLA Greats
I would put up Jackie Robinson, Arthur Ashe, Kareem, and Rafer Johnson against any other school's top 4. No contest. Go Bruins !!
by islandbruin on
Mar 26, 2008 8:12 AM PDT
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And he was Student Body President
by Fox 71 on
Mar 26, 2008 9:05 AM PDT
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Anyone else see
This was also after Salley created a enormously awkward moment by telling callapari to his face that his son looked like shrek, after the poor little tubster drills a free throw. I wish he'd take a shot at JC not his kid lol..
by Ollie on Mar 25, 2008 11:14 PM PDT 0 recs
Kareem
by ppomyyout633 on Mar 26, 2008 3:32 AM PDT 0 recs
Incredible Individual
To be chosen by any sports entity as the best of all time in college basketball is more than lofty. So many talented athletes let their skills carry themselves through life and rarely break out of that world. To transcend his incredible basketball greatness with the intellect, grace, and humility he has is nothing short of astounding.
Usually, when a school puts up one of those promos about alums, they tend to force some jock uncomfortably into the role of businessman or scholar or some other apres-sports-career role and it is an uncomfortable portrayal. With Kareem, it is clearly not.
by whp68 on Mar 26, 2008 4:06 AM PDT 0 recs
The Commercial for UCLA
Isn't it interesting that the 3 greatest big men in our history all are men of character, commitment and generosity?
Our giants do have strong shoulders and I am proud of all of them and the tradition they have created.
by Class of 66 on
Mar 26, 2008 5:10 AM PDT
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Coach Wooden
It is truly amazing that Coach Wooden could bring in a kid from Harlem and a kid from San Diego with obviously very different personalities, and in his role as teacher, impart life lessons which Kareem and Bill Walton have taken to heart.
by islandbruin on
Mar 26, 2008 5:32 AM PDT
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When you use the term...
A rule-defining, record-breaking competitor... a peaceful yet thought-provoking political activist... an experienced, generous coach and mentor... and a respected writer and historian.
I hope no one ever tries to compare our iconic, Mount Rushmore-level alums like Jackie Robinson, Rafer Johnson, Arthur Ashe, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to those of the institution across town.
The sudden drop in altitude could result in vertigo and heart palpitations requiring serious medical attention.
M
by Meriones on Mar 26, 2008 11:28 AM PDT 0 recs



















