Dick Ebersol Archives - Digital Sports Desk https://digitalsportsdesk.com/tag/dick-ebersol/ Online Destination for the Best in Boston Sports Thu, 22 Sep 2022 09:00:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://digitalsportsdesk.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/IMG_0364-2-150x150.jpg Dick Ebersol Archives - Digital Sports Desk https://digitalsportsdesk.com/tag/dick-ebersol/ 32 32 TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | Sept. 11 https://digitalsportsdesk.com/tls-sunday-sports-notes-sept-11/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=tls-sunday-sports-notes-sept-11 Sun, 11 Sep 2022 10:00:45 +0000 https://digitalsportsdesk.com/?p=3047 Sunshine daydream Walking in the tall trees Going where the wind goes Blooming like a red rose Breathing more freely Ride out singing, I’ll walk you in the morning sunshine Sunshine daydream Sunshine daydream Walking in the sunshine – Music by Bob Weir, Words by Robert Hunter and Bob Weir The Foundation of the Basketball […]

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Sunshine daydream

Walking in the tall trees

Going where the wind goes

Blooming like a red rose

Breathing more freely

Ride out singing, I’ll walk you in the morning sunshine

Sunshine daydream

Sunshine daydream

Walking in the sunshine

– Music by Bob Weir, Words by Robert Hunter and Bob Weir

The Foundation of the Basketball Hall of Fame = Family

By TERRY LYONS

UNCASVILLE – Dreams can be both wonderful or frightening. To the contrary – daydreams are delightful, like walking in the sunshine or walking through the woods as sunshine drips through the trees to the point where you can see the beams of light breaking through.

Picture yourself as a child growing up in Bahía Blanca (White Bay), Argentina, a city of 300,000 southwest of Buenos Aires and the futbol crazy country. While the masses are happily playing their favorite game, you’ve taken a road less travelled, following your family ties to the sport of basketball.

Manu Ginobili (Getty Images)

You dream of making the local pro team – Club Estudiantes de Bahía Blanca – maybe hitting the winning shot in the Asociación Bahiense de Básquetbol local league. Your first stop, however, is with Andino Sport Club of La Rioja in the 1995–96 season. Your dream might now travel as far as making the Argentine national team and competing in the Suda-America world qualifiers, or the Olympic Games or the FIBA Worlds.

You’ve heard of the National Basketball Association and have watched a few highlight tapes, maybe the NBA Finals but your dreams are realistic. You don’t go so far as to daydream about winning an Olympic Gold Medal or an NBA Championship. You’ve never even heard of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts – the birthplace of the game.

The game, like the song, takes you where the wind blows.

After two years with your local pro team, in 1998 you make your way to Europe to play for Reggio Calabria in Italy where the magnolia and palms are as wonderful as you’ve ever seen. Instead of the Atlantic Ocean views of Bahía Blanca, you’re playing ball at the tip of the toe of italy, ready to drop-kick the futbol, still prevalent over the basketball, right through the uprights to the Island of Sicily.

You’ve made it big, but the daydreams continue.

It’s off to the EuroLeague and in the year 2000, you sign with Virtus Bologna, a championship contender in Italy’s Lega A and in the EuroLeague.

Now, the dreams are so good you feel as though you can sell them, they’re all coming true, in two-year cycles, as in 2002, after San Antonio Spurs coach Greg Popovich and team GM R.C. Buford have seen you play dozens of times, including a first glimpse in 1998-99 when you played for Reggio Calabria while their Spurs were competing in the McDonald’s Championship in Milan. The Spurs laid claim with a second round NBA draft selection in 1999, the 57th overall pick of the NBA Draft.

It’s off to San Antonio where you’ll meet the son of a guy from Chicago who played some ball at Loyola Chicago and in France became a TV commentator for the NBA on FR-1. As the sport goes global, you realize you’ll join forces with a kid named Tony Parker, Jr., born to a model in Bruges, Belgium and brought up by a basketball-loving Dad to play with a taller kid named Tim Duncan who grew up in the U.S. Virgin Islands and played some college ball at Wake Forest. There will be an Admiral in your dreams. His name is David Robinson who played his ball for Navy, sat-out a couple years and then was joined by Duncan.

Daydreams often include good fortune and you’re about to experience it.

Meanwhile, when you start to count your blessings, you realize that your original group of players from Argentina toiled on the courts for 18 years, all together and good enough to win the gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics. You and your buds upset the great American teams at the 2002 Worlds and again in Athens. The top row of the podium awaited as your Spurs teammate stood, annoyed, on the bronze medal level while your Spurs coach, Coach “Pop,” watch from the sidelines assisting Larry Brown in his agony of defeat.

Your name is Manu Ginobili and to a great extent, all your dreams came true. Except, you never-ever dreamt of being inducted to the Basketball Hall of Fame. Ginobili also became only the second player, joining Bill Bradley, to win an NBA title, a Euroleague Championship and an Olympic gold medal.

Argentina’s win in Athens was the greatest basketball accomplishment ever, but this weekend, Manu Ginobili’s induction to the HoopHall is a solid No. 2 moment and all of Argentina, all of San Antonio, all of Bologna and all of Reggio Calabria will celebrate his success. They were all along for the ride – the dream of dreams – and through Manu’s outgoing personality, his game and his simple smile welcomed all of his many fans around the world onboard. Even Charles Barkley loved SCREAMING his name.

GINOBILI! – a Hall of Famer and rightfully so.

BREAKING NEWS: The USA AmeriCup team lost Saturday in the semifinals to Argentina, 82-73 at the 2022 FIBA AmeriCup tournament at Geraldo Arena in Recife, Brazil. Since 1992, Team USA had won 10 of their previous 12 matchups.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: While Ginobili headlined a large and diverse Class of 2022 for the Basketball Hall, all enshrined Saturday evening, there were others honored on Friday night when the powers-that-be, the trustees of Dr. Naismith’s joint in Springfield, drove down CT-Route 2 to the land of the Mohegan Sun in basketball-crazy Connecticut. … The new Hall of Famers were quizzed by the media and later presented with their Hall jackets while honors were bestowed upon others, such as College Basketball Coach Reggie Minton, former coach at Dartmouth and Air Force and the longtime head of the NABC (National Association of Basketball Coaches). … Additionally, the Hall honored early African-America pioneers, and Manny Jackson Basketball Human Spirit award winners who, in turn, were paying tribute to the work of Hall of Famer in Coach John McClendon and his foundation.

The evening took a turn to the skies for the final honoree. Surprisingly, the great Charles Barkley, Hall of Fame player, two-time Olympic gold medalist and even better commentator for Turner Sports, asked for the honor to introduce Dick Ebersol, former Chairman of NBC, architect of NBC’s longtime partnership and coverage of the Olympic Games and the man behind the glorious years of the NBA on NBC.

Barkley began his remarks, delivered in a speedy six minutes, with special thanks to all of the black players who played ahead of him and did the “heavy lifting” in terms of fighting racial bias and paving the way for the players of today. He also recognized Sue Bird and Silvia Fowles who are both retiring from the WNBA this season after illustrious careers on the college and pro level. Then, Charles got serious.

“I want to thank every Hall of Famer and every contributor who is in this thing tonight because we are a family,” said Barkley. “We all do something that’s important to the game, whether you play the game, talk about it on radio or TV or newspapers. We’re all part of the same family, so a thank you to everybody who plays a part in it.

“So why am I here now,” asked Barkley, proposing the question to a packed auditorium and to himself. “Dick Ebersol, I love you,” said Charles as he drifted into a slight tangent.

(Hall of Fame Coach) “Rudy Tomjanovich, I always have to say thank-you because my last couple years in Houston, Rudy treated me great. I couldn’t “Play Dead” but Rudy treated me GREAT. And, the reason I knew I couldn’t “Play Dead” was because Dick Ebersol came up to me and said, ‘Hey, what are you going to do after you retire? I think you should go into television.”

“I was like, ‘Damn, I thought I could still play,’ and clearly, I couldn’t.

“He said, ‘I think you should really think about going into television,’ but I said, ‘I don’t really know what I’m going to do when I retire.’ He said, let’s get together and we did, but he said, ‘I think you’re going to be in trouble all the time because you’re honest, but I think you’re going to be good on television.’

“People say they want to hear the truth but they really don’t want that,” noted Ebersol at the time. “They want to hear that they’re team is great and their favorite player is great. That’s all the fans want.”

“I said, ‘I’m gonna come work for you.’ I’m going to NBC.”

But then, there was a change of heart.

Barkley explained in detail, “A friend of mine, Michael Jackson (then an exec with Turner Sports just out of Georgetown) said he needed a favor. ‘I need you to meet with the people at Turner.’

I said, ‘Mike, I’m going to go work with the people at NBC.’

He said, “Just do me a favor. It’ll make me look good that I could get Charles Barkley to come down and interview at Turner.”

“So I go down, and we end up smoking cigars and drinking,” explained Barkley, adding, “I know that’s gonna shock y’all. About 1:00 or 2:00 in the morning, I’m telling them about what my game-plan is, what I want to do on television. I want to talk about social issues and everything.”

“They said, ‘You can do whatever you want.’

“So I called my agent at 2:30 in the morning and said, ‘I got a problem. I think I want to sign with Turner. They were really awesome tonight. NBC just does the games on weekends, I think I want to sign with Turner.”

My agent says, ‘Think about it and we’ll talk tomorrow.”

“I go to bed but woke-up about three hours later and said, ‘You know, I can’t sleep, I’m so nervous.’

He said, “What do you want to do?”

“I want to sign with Turner,” recalled Barkley. “And, my agent said, ‘Do you want me to call Mr. Ebersol?”

I said, “I’ve got to be a man and do it, and this is the reason I’m here tonight and why I love this guy,” Barkley cut to the chase, as Ebersol’s wife, Susan Saint James began to tear-up with emotion at Ebersol’s side while Barkley’s voice quivered.

“Mr Ebersol, can I talk to you? I need to really talk to you, I’ve got something going on.”

“I want to thank-you for talking me into going into television, and I don’t know how to say this, but I think I’m going to go to Turner.

“You know what he said to me? He said, ‘Charles, I think you’re going to be great on television. Those guys at Turner are awesome and if you ever need me, just pick-up the phone.’”

“I was … I had cried, getting ready to make that call,” recalled Barkley. “When he said that to me, it just lifted such a weight off my shoulders. So, I want to thank you for making me feel better because I was so devastated. You are the reason I’m in television and television has been great.

“I love working with Turner. I love Ernie (Johnson), Kenny (Smith) and Shaq (O’Neal), but it’s all because of you.”

NBA ON NBC/DICK EBERSOL DRILLED THE GAME-WINNER: “Nothing is more important to me in the whole world than relationships, said Dick Ebersol as he began his speech accepting the Curt Gowdy Transformative Media award Friday night. “Relationships with your own family, relationships with the people you work with or the people you go to school with.

“Then you meet people who don’t exactly fit in the mold and you’re blown away by them and you stick at it – over and over again – and then you come to a night like tonight and this awesome human being gets up here and says all these wonderful things.

“I know we have people here from all over the world of basketball, but I want to say, as a resident of Connecticut, how proud I am of the basketball fans of this State. This State, along with Tennessee, has made women’s basketball the icon it is in all sports in America, and you’re all to be congratulated and thanks for all the passion you’ve brought in supporting these Connecticut teams.

“I also would like to talk about two of the people I miss most in the world and I want to talk about both of them for just a little while,” said Ebersol. “One was Bill Russell who was a great, great, great friend. A year ago, he was up here on this stage and I was watching at home, on television, in Litchfield, Connecticut.

“I think now, this giant, this man who set the standard for how African-American athletes in this country would be treated. He stopped at nothing to keep pushing it and pushing it. He encouraged so many other athletes whether they were still in college or others who followed in his footsteps.

“We were just at his funeral, and I feel fortunate to have been there because it was such a small gathering, but here tonight, I’d like everyone in this room to stand-up for five seconds and salute William Felton Russell.

“The other person I’d like to talk about, I’m sure many of you in this room are aware of his legend, his unbelievable imagination and as much as anybody in the professional game, has shaped-up what has made the NBA second only to the National Football League. Five years ago, maybe ten years ago, that, too, might have been unimaginable, except to David Stern.

“I’d like to ask everyone to stand again for David Stern who made our sport the highlight of American sport.”

“There are so many others to say thank you too, in my family, in this glorious State, in these United States of America, but let me send you home tonight by saying thank you for supporting this great game the way you do, from pee-wee to high school to college and to all the people, many seated over here, who coach these young people to become the champions they are, not only on the court but how they become great examples for the youth of our country.”


LEGENDS OF SPORTS: The previously featured Legend of Sports podcast (LOS) has been on a slight hiatus this summer but was at the Basketball Hall of Fame activities to compile a wealth of big time guests. Click below for a sampling:

LOS on KOBE

LAY-UPS, JUMP SHOTS AND SUGGESTION BOXES: The Halls of Fame of the three major American sports need to work together to make August “Hall of Fame Month.” … The month could begin with the sport of Baseball paying tribute to their class of Hall of Famers in Cooperstown, NY on the first weekend of the month. … From there, the National Football League can host the first exhibition game of the year and conduct ceremonies for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio on the second weekend of the month. … Passing the baton for the third weekend of the month, the legends of basketball would gather in Springfield, Mass for the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame induction, before they head-off to the Mohegan Sun Resort in Connecticut for some golf and additional festivities. … The Hockey Hall of Fame has traditionally conducted their induction in November at the Hockey Hall in Toronto.

Embed from Getty Images

BLUE RIBBON: College basketball fans, don’t let too much time pass in ordering this year’s edition of the Blue Ribbon College Yearbook. While the hard copy edition is at the printer and will be ready to ship in about a month, you can order the digital edition at blueribbonyearbook.com

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