Bill
Walton
William
Theodore Walton III, better known as Bill Walton (born
November 5, 1952, in La Mesa, California), is an American
former basketball player and current television sportscaster.
He is the father of current Los Angeles Lakers player,
Luke Walton. Walton was inducted into the Basketball Hall
of Fame on May 10, 1993.
College
career
Walton played college basketball for John Wooden at the University of California,
Los Angeles (UCLA) from 1970 to 1974, winning the national title in 1972 over
Florida State and again in 1973 with an 87-66 win over Memphis State in which
the big redhead from San Diego made an impressive 21 of 22 field goal attempts
and scored 44 points. Some regard this as the greatest ever offensive performance
in American college basketball. The Walton-led 1971-1972 UCLA basketball team
had a record of 30-0, in the process winning its games by an average margin
of more than 30 points,one of the greatest college basketball teams of all
time.
He was
the backbone of two consecutive 30-0 seasons and was also
part of UCLA's NCAA record 88 game winning streak. (Ironically,
discounting its losses to Notre Dame to begin and end the
streak, UCLA won 133 consecutive games, as the Bruins won
45 in a row before a previous UCLA team led by Sidney Wicks
lost to Notre Dame and Austin Carr. Walton still admits
the loss to Notre Dame's Coach Digger Phelps to end the
88-game streak bothers him more than any other loss in
his career.)
Bill
Walton was the 1973 recipient of the James E. Sullivan
Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States.
Walton also received the Naismith College Player of the
Year as the top college basketball player in the country
three years in a row while attending UCLA, at the same
time earning Academic All-American honors three times.
Some college basketball historians rate Walton as the greatest
who ever played the game at the college level.
In Bill
Walton's senior year of 1973-1974, UCLA was inexperienced
at guard, and the school's streak of seven consecutive
national titles was snapped when North Carolina State defeated
the Bruins 80-77 in double overtime in the NCAA semi-finals.
After Walton's graduation in 1974, UCLA defeated Kentucky
for the NCAA title in 1975 to complete an amazing run of
ten national championships in twelve years. Legendary Bruin
coach John Wooden retired after UCLA's 1975 title, and
Bill Walton was one of the key figures during the school's
unprecedented and likely never-to-be-repeated domination
of college basketball. With the departures of Wooden and
Walton, the UCLA dynasty came to an end.
NBA career
Walton was drafted number one overall
by the Portland Trail Blazers and was hailed as the savior
of the franchise. Alas, his first two seasons were marred
by injury (at different times he broke his nose, foot,
wrist and leg) and the Blazers missed the playoffs both
years. It was not until the 1976-77 season that he was
healthy and, spurred by new head coach Jack Ramsay, the
Trail Blazers became the Cinderella team of the NBA.
Walton
led the NBA in both rebounds per game and blocked shots
per game in 1976-77, and was selected to the NBA All-Star
Game but did not participate due to an injury. Walton was
named to the NBA's First-All Defensive Team and the All-NBA
Second Team for his regular season accomplishments. In
the post-season, Walton led Portland to a 4-0 sweep of
the Los Angeles Lakers in the conference finals (in spite
of a powerful performance by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), and
went on to help the Trail Blazers to the NBA title in 1977
over the favored Philadelphia 76ers (despite losing the
first two games of the series). Walton was named the Finals
MVP.
The following
year, the Blazers won 50 of their first 60 games before
Walton suffered a broken foot in what turned out to be
the first in a horrific string of foot and ankle injuries
that cut short his career. He was nonetheless named the
league MVP that season (1978).
He played
in his only All-Star Game in 1978, and was named to both
the NBA's First-All Defensive Team and the All-NBA First
Team. Walton did return to action for the playoffs, but
was reinjured in the second game of a series played against
the Seattle Supersonics. Without Walton to lead them, Portland
lost the series to Seattle in six games. At it turned out,
Walton would never play for the Trail Blazers again.
Walton
spent several seasons alternating between the court and
the disabled list with both Portland and his hometown San
Diego Clippers. After the 1984-85 campaign Walton went
shopping. He called on two of the league's premier teams,
the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers.
After
several Celtics said they liked the idea of having Walton
as a teammate backing up workhorses Robert Parish and Kevin
McHale, Red Auerbach made the deal happen. One in particular
was Larry Bird, who happened to be in Auerbach's office
when Walton called and said that if Walton felt healthy
enough to play that it was good enough for him, as opposed
to Lakers GM Jerry West, who was hedging his interest in
Walton pending a doctor's report.
Boston
acquired Walton by sending popular forward Cedric Maxwell
to the Clippers along with a first-round draft pick. Walton
once again had the chance to play for a world champion,
and his childhood hopes of playing for the Celtics were
realized. Providing a reliable backup to Bird's fellow
front-liners Kevin McHale and Robert Parish, Walton would
receive the NBA Sixth Man Award that season, becoming the
only player to have ever won both the Sixth Man Award and
MVP.
However,
he was again injured the following season. Walton attempted
a comeback in 1990, but injury again intervened and he
retired from the game. His ankle problems became so severe
years later that he had both his ankles surgically fused.
His saga of injury and failed rehabs was connected to the
less than ethical dispersal of pain killers by the doctor
who was assigned to his case. In effect he was rushed back
onto the court before he was totally ready to play, sometimes
even playing on ankles that were still broken.
Not one
to harbor animosity, Walton has said repeatedly in his
broadcasts that he is just as much to blame for taking
the medication as the doctor was for giving it to him.
Yet his experience with injuries and the circumstances
surrounding them have come to serve as a warning for professional
athletes who undergo major injury as well as being an interesting
case study for medical ethics.
In 1996,
he was named as one of the NBA's 50 Greatest Players of
all time.
Broadcasting
Since his retirement as a player, Walton has overcome a severe stuttering problem
to become a successful NBA color commentator for NBC (1990-2002) Los Angeles
Clippers and ABC/ESPN (since 2002).
Walton's
trademark catchphrases include, "That's a terrible
call! Terrible," "Where in the world is [x]?" (for
a player who has disappeared from a game), "What is
a foul?", "He couldn't even inbound the ball!" and "Throw
it down, big man! Throw it down!" In addition after
a predominantly one-handed player makes a basket going
to his strong hand Walton will summarize the action and
then say, "He's left-handed by the way Marv" or "Someone
should tell player |x| that player |y| is left handed and
promises to be so for the remainder of the game," intimating
that perhaps the defender should defend that side of the
player. Walton typically is paired up with Steve "Snapper" Jones
for NBA games due to him and Jones having a point-counter
point banter during games. Despite their frequent on-air
argumentative banter they are actually good friends as
was evidenced in Bill Walton's short lived 2003 TV series
Bill Walton's Long Strange Trip.
In addition,
his commentary during games is often criticized for the
degree to which he exaggerates his statements. In one instance
where Tony Parker of the San Antonio Spurs had a pass deflected
out of bounds by a defender, Walton stated, "Tony
Parker just made the worst pass in the history of Western
civilization!" Often this is done to intentional or
perhaps unintentional comedic effect.
Walton
also finds it difficult to compliment his son and current
Lakers forward, Luke Walton, while calling Lakers games.
On one occasion he referred to his son as "that Lakers
player".
Pro career
1974 – 1987
Former teams
- Portland
Trail Blazers (1974 – 1979)
- San
Diego/Los Angeles Clippers (1979 – 1985)
- Boston
Celtics (1985 – 1987)
- Awards
1973 James E. Sullivan Award
- 1973
Naismith Award
- 1978
NBA MVP
- Two-time
NBA Champion (1978, 1986)
- 1977
Finals MVP
- 1986
NBA Sixth Man of the Year
- Hall
of Fame 1993
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Bill Walton. (2007, January 4). In Wikipedia,
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