Authors: Jack McCallum
So for the Olympic selection committee, it was an easy decision that Laettner would be the college guy, the lone concession to the old way of doing things. It would not be an easy task for anyone, far less for Laettner, the bully-boy antagonist with a lot of attitude.
On May 11, a few weeks before he was to meet Michael Jordan in a Finals showdown that everyone was waiting for, Clyde Drexler was named to the Olympic team along with Christian Laettner. The roster was now complete, and for all eternity Clyde would be the eleventh man, the add-on among the NBA players.
The main argument against adding Drexler to the team was that he was too much like Jordan. At the same time, that was probably the best reason to add him, since being a lot like Jordan couldn’t be a bad thing. In truth, by this time, it didn’t matter what style of player or which position was to be added. Everything was set: ball-handling with Magic, Stockton, Jordan, and Pippen; rebounding with Robinson, Ewing, Barkley, and Malone; outside shooting with Mullin, Jordan, and Bird; lockdown defending with Pippen and Jordan; scoring with everybody; high-level entertainment with Barkley. Coffee and donuts? The college kid could bring them. It was only
necessary to take the best available player, or, as the case might be, the best available player who wasn’t Isiah.
For several years the Jordan-or-Clyde story line had been predictable chum for the sportswriter—I chomped on it from time to time—and Jordan invariably won in all places save the lovely city of Portland, Oregon, whose fans felt loyal to Clyde, ignored by three of the four time zones, and just plain sick and tired of hearing about Jordan. Plus, they
needed
Drexler to be as good since it was the presence of Drexler on the roster that prompted the Trail Blazers to bypass Jordan and go for a big man, Sam Bowie, in the 1984 draft. Portland-based broadcaster Steve “Snapper” Jones, a delightful man who loved to talk basketball and debate any question, was especially vocal about Drexler being the equal of Jordan. Rod Thorn, conjuring up his best West Virginia drawl, used to say to him: “Steve, d’y’all have TVs out there in Portland?”
For the most part, Drexler stayed away from the comparisons with Jordan, but he was just vain enough—a quality that does not distinguish him from most other high-achieving pro athletes—to stick one little toe into those dangerous waters every once in a while, to ask quietly, as he asked me from time to time off the record:
What can Michael do that I can’t do?
One answer was nothing. There was nothing that Jordan did that Drexler couldn’t do.
The other answer was nothing … except that Jordan did everything
better
.
They played the same two-guard position with a similar athletic flair, but Jordan was a better pull-up shooter, a better driver, a better passer, a better defender, a better rebounder, and even a better dunker, though Drexler, whose running vertical was measured at forty-four inches, could probably outleap Jordan.
One can only imagine, then, the ghastliness of the waking nightmare in which Clyde found himself in Game 1 of the 1992 NBA Finals. His Trail Blazers had gotten off to a quick start against Jordan’s Bulls in Chicago. But then came the second period and Jordan started draining three-point shots, one, two, three, four, five …
What the hell was going on? Neither Jordan nor Drexler was ever considered a drop-dead long-distance man. Drexler’s career percentage on threes was 31 percent, and Jordan’s was only one percentage point better. However, Drexler’s long-range shooting sank to about 28 percent in the postseason, while Jordan’s rose to 33 percent. That is well on its way to being an appreciable difference. Still, going into these Finals, Drexler was generally considered a better long-distance shooter than Jordan, or as Jordan pointedly put it before the series began, “Clyde is a better three-point shooter than I
choose
to be.”
And then in this strange Game 1 Jordan hit his sixth three-pointer and … what was he doing? He was
shrugging
? Who the hell ever saw him
shrug
? But, yes, after the final one went in, Jordan glanced over at courtside commentator Magic Johnson and shrugged, as if to say,
I don’t know what’s going on myself
.
Drexler knew exactly what was going on. In the endless war of comparison between him and Jordan, he was getting torched again. And what did Clyde the Glide say to Jordan during all of this? Spicy comments such as “Aren’t you going to miss?”
“Nice shot,” and “Good play.” I wrote in
SI
the following week that Drexler “had set the art of trash-talking back about 30 years.”
For a long time Drexler was said to have the highest score ever recorded on the psychological profile test that the Trail Blazers give rookies. Assistant coach John Wetzel used to talk about Drexler having “a gentleness to his soul.” Clyde was also unfailingly polite and cordial, even to the media. All of those things sound good if you’re running for student council president, but they’re not necessarily barometers of NBA success.
As for basketball, Drexler played a lot of small forward at the University of Houston and a lot of center at Ross Sterling High School in Houston, so he did have an adjustment when he became an NBA shooting guard. He had some strange habits for a great player. He brought his hands down to his waist before he raised
them to shoot, and he dribbled with his head down and almost exclusively with his right hand, habits that didn’t change much as he matured. But neither did they seem to slow him down all that much. (Jerry West almost always went right and Lenny Wilkens almost always went left, and no one could stop them, either.)
Then, too, while Drexler didn’t exactly feud with his coaches, he did spar with two of them—the respected Jack Ramsey and the less-respected Mike Schuler. Drexler’s rep for showing up “just in time” for practice was widely known, especially since Drexler owned up to it. Whereas Jordan was picking fights and busting on his teammates during intrasquad scrimmages, Drexler put himself in the practice-kind-of-counts-but-not-really camp.
In 1990 Don Nelson called Drexler the most overrated player in the league and added a few other poisonous comments. “He chips away at what an organization is trying to do,” said Nelson. “He is the worst of all kinds because he comes off as polite. He is religious, devoted to family. Yet in the context of a team, he is destructive.” Drexler always figured that Nelson was in fact speaking the mind of his assistant, Schuler, who had been fired by the Blazers midway through the 1988–89 season and ended up with the Warriors. Whatever their source, those were inexcusable comments—indicative of why Nelson would’ve been the wrong man to coach the Dream Team—and Nelson later apologized for making them.
But by 1992, Drexler was considered by many to be the best non-Jordan player in the league. There was wide consensus that he had “toned down” his game, was playing with more consistency, and had enough playmaking skills to overcome Portland’s rep as a dumb team, a criticism that nagged at Drexler. He insisted that he had always played with consistency and that his game had never needed toning down because it was never toned up. Of all the African American athletes I ever met who were sensitive to the stereotype that blacks make it on pure athleticism and whites make it on discipline and smarts, Drexler was at the top of the list, along with Isiah Thomas. As for the “dumb” tag, he and his Trail Blazer teammates used to joke about it during practice, scratching their heads and saying “Duh” after coach Rick Adelman called for a certain set.
But it was one of those clenched-smile jokes because, indeed, they had been out-thought by Chuck Daly’s wily Pistons in the Finals the year before. And here came Jordan and the Bulls to face them in what they all knew was their last best chance to win it all.
It wasn’t to be. Drexler was playing on a bum right knee, and in truth, though the Trail Blazers were a match for the Bulls on paper, they weren’t as basketball-savvy and they didn’t have Jordan, who remembered that, eight years earlier, he had been passed over because Portland was sure it had its two-guard in Drexler.
When Jordan made his sixth and final three-pointer, Drexler was not on him. Cliff Robinson closed out too late to defend it, and it was Robinson who was left shaking his head as Jordan shrugged.
But make no mistake about it: it was Clyde who got shrugged. That’s how it always was. Another player might’ve searched for some rationalization—
I wasn’t really on him when he made most of those threes
—or at least stared down a reporter when asked about Jordan’s three-point orgy. But here’s what Drexler said. “I said before the series that he had two thousand moves. I was wrong. He has three thousand. I can tell you this, I’m glad I’m going to Barcelona on
his
team.”
Clyde Drexler insists that he will make me lunch. We are in the kitchen of his roomy house, which lies off the seventh fairway (a long par-4) of a beautiful suburban golf course. Living under such trying circumstances has turned Drexler into a low-handicapper who plays from time to time with a neighbor, Jim Nantz, a buddy from the University of Houston.
Lunch is good—chicken salad and fruit; Clyde is a careful eater who has always taken care of himself—and we talk of many things, including kids, the aggravation of aging knee joints (he has a little, I have a lot), and our mutual butchering past (both of our fathers were meat cutters). But being the eleventh man on the Dream Team nags at him, and I open up that conversational box. He does not close it.
“I learned I was on the team from [Trail Blazers general manager] Harry Glickman,” says Drexler. “Harry was all excited about it,
but I was … melancholy.” I thought that a strange and interesting word to use. “I should’ve been on there with the first batch of players. You can only control what you can control, right?
“But it bothered me. How can you leave off Worthy, Dominique, and Isiah? And leave me off, too? I was runner-up for the MVP that season. I should’ve been on the team right away and so should they have.”
Okay, I say, but who would he have left off? There were only twelve spots.
“You look at production that year,” he answers. “What did Bird do that year? What did Magic do?”
Well, I say, we all know why they were there. It was a Dream Team. They’d saved the league.
He doesn’t say much about Bird. Drexler remembers a night in Barcelona when he came out of his room and there was Bird sipping a beer. He fetched one for Clyde, and they stood there for a long while and talked. Years later Drexler treasures that memory. “Just standing there drinking beer and talking to Larry Bird,” says Drexler with a big smile on his face.
(It’s an example of that distant-legend mystique that Bird has, even with his fellow Dream Teamers. They knew him mostly as this mysterious, cold-blooded character, so he surprised them when he came across as loose and humorous off the court.)
But Magic, whom he knew better from years of Western Conference competition, was another story. “Magic was always …” And Drexler goes into a decent Magic impression: “ ‘Come on, Clyde, come on, Clyde, get with me, get with me,’ and making all that noise. And, really, he couldn’t play much by that time. He couldn’t guard his shadow.
“But you have to understand what was going on then. Everybody kept waiting for Magic to die. Every time he’d run up the court everybody would feel sorry for the guy, and he’d get all that benefit of the doubt. Magic came across like, ‘All this is my stuff.’ Really? Get outta here, dude. He was on the declining end of his career.”
Drexler had played exquisitely in the 1992 All-Star Game in Orlando,
although the MVP award eventually went to Magic, who had been added by Commissioner Stern as a special thirteenth player to the Western Conference roster (
Chapter 20
). “If we all knew Magic was going to live this long, I would’ve gotten the MVP of that game, and Magic probably wouldn’t have made the Olympic team.”