ElGee wrote:http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=vv5XAAAAIBAJ&sjid=AvcDAAAAIBAJ&dq=fight%20wilt-chamberlain&pg=1702%2C2052933
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=PU ... %2C8623906
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8f ... %2C2537356
None of this is new to me, but the thing about the first article is (copying and pasting from my notes), as far as the first point of difference—Chamberlain wanting to play a full 48 minutes a game while Van Breda Kolff wanted to rest him, Alex Hannum said about becoming coach of the Philadelphia 76ers in 1966-67:
Alex Hannum wrote:One of the big things was that Wilt wanted to play all 48 minutes. Yes, he could play every minute, but to do that he had to pace himself.
I said, ‘This is a different team from the ones earlier in your career. We have more talent and I need to play more guys. I don’t give a damn who you are, you can’t go at full speed for 48 minutes. I also don’t think it’s a bad idea to rest you for a few minutes, put someone else in there and give our team a different look.’ […] [H]e didn’t necessarily agree with me, but he went along with the idea.
This is the exact same thing Hannum brought up, so why was he willing to go along with it when Hannum said it, but it became a problem two years later? As far as the second point of difference—Chamberlain not wanting to play high post, Hannum said:
Alex Hannum wrote:In one of our conversations, Wilt said, “You know, I can pass the ball as well as anyone in basketball.”
I said, “Fine, let’s see it.”
This led to a decision made by both Wilt and myself to play him at the high post. Early in his career, Wilt was always near the basket so he could catch the ball in position to score. But he also clogged the middle so that it was hard for his teammates to drive. With all the talent we had, I wanted to give the other guys room to go to the basket. And Wilt wanted to get them the ball so they could score. That was our game plan, and we stuck to it.
Again, this is the exact same thing that Hannum brought up on the team he just left. If he had no problem playing high post with Hannum as coach, why did he suddenly have a problem after he left Philadelphia?
For years the Los Angeles Lakers have been going with make-do people at center, winning division titles, but fading ingloriously in pro basketball’s World Series.
Perhaps it isn’t entirely fair to single out their ex-pivotmen as the primary reason for this failure. Some had occasionally strong, if not unforgettable, moments with the Lakers. But none of them will ever get into basketball’s Hall of Fame without a ticket.
Last summer Jack Kent Cooke, who owns the Los Angeles franchise, went out and got someone who could. For money and three players, Cooke was able to pry Wilt Chamberlain from the Philadelphia 76ers.
All of a sudden people were saying this was the first time a National Basketball Association title had been won in July. Marrying Chamberlain’s talents to those of Elgin Baylor and Jerry West would make Coach Bill van Breda Kolff as fireproof as the boss’s son.
The Lakers are formidable all right. They will win in the West and they will win big. But the perfect pro basketball team they are not. Van Breda Kolff, whose emotional fires never go out, is not completely happy with his ball club.
“We are all creatures of habit and Chamberlain still plays in too close to the basket to suit me,” Bill said. “When Wilt stays inside too much he isn’t able to set picks, his teammates aren’t able to cut off him, and the whole club loses some of its movement.
“I don’t want him to stop scoring,” Van Breda Kolff continued. “I want Chamberlain to get the ball and to be able to do things with it. But mostly I want him to play a high post. This is what most of my other players [particularly Baylor and West] are used to and what I think is best for the team.”
Asked how Wilt felt about this, Bill suggested: “Why don’t you ask him? Chamberlain’s statement was not only frank, but explosive.
“Instead of playing the high post, I’d prefer to stay inside and try to score 50 points a game,” Wilt said. “It’s something Van Breda Kolff and I have talked about, but so far I haven’t been able to convince him that my way is the best way.
“If a man can score the way I can, I don’t see why anybody would want to change him,” Chamberlain continued. “Suppose somebody in Boston wanted Bill Russell to suddenly put all his concentration on offense. People would say Russell was crazy to change because defense in the thing that made him. Am I any different because offense is the thing that made me? I don’t think so.
“Just because it’s been a few years since I averaged 50 points a game for Philadelphia, don’t think I couldn’t do it again. If anything, with all the young and inexperienced centers in the league right now, it would be easier.
Hannum wanted to change him, and the result was arguably the greatest individual single-season in NBA history and the greatest single-season team in NBA history. Why revert back to pre-Hannum, when what Hannum wanted worked?
And it wasn't just van Breda Kolff, because he also had a problem when Joe Mullaney wanted him to play high post, so when he wanted him to do so for a few minutes he deliberately stayed there all game in Game 2 of the 1970 playoff series against the Suns, which prompted Mullaney to say, “I wanted him there to help run a few plays for West, but we certainly didn’t want him way out there all the time!”
It's one of the things that's puzzling about him.