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Starting Monday, May 12, I will be moving my blog to my own website. I hope you will join me so we can continue sharing.
www.kareemabduljabbar.com
Yours, K.
Winning my first MVP in 1971, my second year with the Milwaukee Bucks, was a great honor. I liked the fact that it went along with us winning the world championship, and having done it while playing with Oscar Robertson made me feel great. During that season, I had to play a couple of games against Wilt Chamberlain, who was the standard prior to me for excellence in pivot play. I was able to outplay him -– 40.2 PPG in five games, including a 50-point game –- and that to me was an indication that I had possibly arrived.
Prior to the 1975-76 season I was traded to the Lakers. I was very fortunate to win my fourth MVP award that year, because the team didn't do well. We finished 40-42 and missed the playoffs. But I had such a great year statistically, that's why I won it. In 1980, when I won my last regular-season MVP, that was also the year that a rookie named Magic Johnson burst onto the scene. When we got Earvin, we had somebody that could run the team offense. Jack McKinney did a great job of understanding Earvin's unique ability to play the game and to devise an offense that worked for all of the people that we had on the team. I've won six total regular-season MVPs, more than any other player, and people ask me all the time -- do I think that another player will achieve that number? It’s always possible, but it’s going to take a dominant player to do it. There have been a lot of great players to not win it.
My thoughts on Kobe’s first MVP: Kobe has had the ability to score so prolifically that people at times have knocked him. But winning that award helps put everything in perspective and shows that he's been a leader and team player in addition to being so brilliant at what he does. Derek Fisher’s return to Utah on Friday is the one-year anniversary to the day of what Derek went through during last year’s playoffs with his daughter’s medical troubles and his emotional return for Game 2 of the Jazz’s Western Conference semifinal series with the Warriors. I thought Derek made quite a statement both as a professional athlete and as a parent that day. He was able to do both with an outstanding degree of determination and focus. When he returned to Utah this season as a member of the Lakers, I was surprised by the reception he received from the crowd, and I didn't understand it. Maybe the people up there in Utah have some issues that I'm not aware of.
I think Derek Fisher brings a lot to the Lakers -- he has meant quality leadership for the team and he runs the offense with a steady hand. He keeps the younger players from just flying off the edge emotionally, keeps them steady and keeps them focused. His excellent play on the court aside, I think he is very valuable to the team just because of his leadership qualities. Derek has made everybody focus on how we need to win instead of getting into useless details. He's enabled the team to recognize the difference between those useless details and what is important to succeed.
My most memorable moment for our franchise, and for me personally, was beating the Celtics in 1985. That was a very special moment. I was fortunate enough to be the MVP in that series. That, to me, had a whole lot of emotional value to it, which some people might not understand. The Lakers were 0-8 against the Celtics in championship play up until that point, but we finally had the better team. And for me being a key reason for the Lakers to be able to finally break through was even more special.
P.S. Today is my last blog for the L.A. Times. Starting Monday, May 12, I will be moving my blog to my own website. I hope you will join me at www.kareemabduljabbar.com so we can continue sharing.
I have received many comments on my article about the Olympics Boycott, on paper and online -- so here we go:
To Frank Antonacci, Sid Holmes, Dean Nelson, Jim Beran, Steve Adams, Ed Robinson, Steve Baker, Arthur Carlson, Rich Larsen, Clarence Chappell, Greg Gose, Jamile, Ed Shatzen, Carla Nardoni, Christian DeBlis, Bill Lundy, Bob Guild... Thanks for your support.
To Beau... An Olympic medal would have been a nice experience for me but I felt that my diploma was a more important priority and stayed with my summer job. Thanks.
To Klaus Beiten... Klaus stated that many other nations have issues with the U.S. that are quite similar to the issues others say that they have with China. I am very aware of the double standards that stick out when life in America is compared with life in other countries. Truly not one nation on Earth can claim it is doing a perfect job in caring for all of its citizens. We have a ways to go as a species. I hope more people like us are able to reach out and create more awareness on these issues.
To Robert Liu... Thanks for your response to my article. I hope there will be more opportunities for our various communities to interact. All the best, K.
To Chuck Reilly... As I clearly stated in my article, there was no boycott of the '68 Olympics. I personally did not boycott those Olympics, nor do I regret not going. Our nation was represented by outstanding basketball athletes in '68 who won the gold medal. I am proud and happy to say that I don't hate anyone based on their ethnicity. I've had issues with how some white people have treated black Americans through the years. You might want to Google Emmitt Till, Medgar Evers or Martin Luther King Jr., also the movie "Mississippi Burning." The last thing I should share with you is the fact that any issues between myself and my high school coach were amicably resolved long before he passed away. Sorry to disappoint you. Oh -- and the R.I. tourney was in December of '63.
To Kai Chen... Thanks for your informative e-mail that shares info on the nature of the Chinese Communist Party. Detailed information on that subject was not available to me before I heard from you. I will not be totally ignorant about that subject in the future. I hope that athletes such as yourself will be able to attain the democratic freedoms we take for granted.
And finally thank you all, and each one of you. Yours K.
P.S. I will be moving my blog within the next two weeks to my website www.kareemabduljabbar.com. Please follow me over to my site so you can continue sharing.

Click here to see all images from Dubai.
I have recently seen some amazing pictures from Dubai, which is an Arab country on the southern shore of the Persian Gulf. I am amazed by the enormous growth that it has experienced in the 15 years since I first visited there.
Dubai has a respectable oil industry, but that sector of its economy accounts for only 6% of its size. The leaders of Dubai sought to make it a modern commercial hub and not become a place that had only oil to offer. It doesn't have religious police, and women have rights that are actually respected. The growth that I am referring to is truly mind-boggling because 15 years ago, the city had at best a few high-rise buildings.
Today it looks like a city out of the "Stars Wars" movies. It is in the process of putting up the "world's largest structure" and has completed other land development ventures that are truly remarkable, including the world's tallest hotel, the world's largest waterfront development, and an undersea hotel and artificial islands that have been made in the Gulf. Dubai has also hosted major sporting events that have gained the attention of the world's sporting elite. It has taken a lot of foresight from the rulers of Dubai to achieve this kind of development in so little time. By diversifying the nature of business in Dubai, the nation has assured itself a place in the economy of the 21st Century.
P.S. I will be moving my blog within the next two weeks to my website www.kareemabduljabbar.com. Please follow me over to my site so you can continue sharing.
The Lakers were able to overcome a week’s absence from playing and take Game 1 from the Jazz, but it was certainly not an easy win. Had the Lakers not benefited from the presence of Kobe Bryant, they might not have that victory put away.
Utah plays a every physical game, and the Jazz are very determined to win the “small areas” of the game to gain their victories. By “small areas” I mean to say that the Jazz see every possession as a plus for their way of winning. Loose balls, rebounds, steals, turnovers, jump balls and defensive pressure that results in a change of possession will all be utilized to beat you. Their style is very reminiscent of the style of play of their coach Jerry Sloan.
Jerry was emblematic of the term “hard nosed” when he was a player for the Chicago Bulls. I can remember several games he played against my former teammate Oscar Robertson that were serious physical battles with no prisoners taken. The Jazz will use any and every way to beat you, and they don’t tend to make the mental errors that take teams out of contention. On Sunday the Jazz did not shoot the ball very well but were able to overcome that deficit by pounding the offensive boards. They were able to stay in the game by regaining the ball after missing shots and keeping possession. The difference in offensive rebounding was Utah 25 and Lakers 8. The Lakers will have to do a much better job of rebounding on their defensive end if they want a happy ending to this series. The second-chance points that the Lakers gave up (26) were way too much to tolerate for a team that wants to go to the next round. But the Lakers have a serious ace in the hole named Kobe Bryant.
Kobe led the Lakers in scoring with 38 points and also had a team high seven assists. The series will be definitely be determined by the adjustments that will be made by either team. The Jazz will want to shoot the ball more effectively and the Lakers will want to do a better job on their defensive board and thus limit the Jazz to one shot every time down court. In the end, they will have an ace in the hole (Kobe) that should be a determining factor in this series.
When I played the Jazz back in ’88, every game was a grind. The Jazz won the first game in L.A., which put a lot of pressure on the Lakers. We went on to win the second game in L.A., then lost Game 3 in Utah. We overcame them in Utah in Game 4, but the pivotal game for the Lakers was Game 5, because we went up 3-2. We won the game with Michael Cooper's game-winning shot with only three seconds left. Cooper made a lot of clutch shots for us throughout his career, but this was his only game-winning shot.
P.S. I will be moving my blog within the next two weeks to my website www.kareemabduljabbar.com. Please follow me over to my site so you can continue sharing.

(Right: Spencer Haywood (8) leads way during U.S. gold-medal win at the
1968 Games, where there was a protest by black Americans but no
boycott. Left: Smith, who won the 200-meter dash at the Olympic Games
in Mexico City, along with bronze medalist and teammate John Carlos.)
Quick note: I will be replying to your comments shortly.
In 1968 I was a 20-year-old college
junior whose basketball success had been made famous. I’d been honored
as Player of the Year, Most Outstanding Player in the NCAA Tournament,
named the USBWA Player of the Year, and played the “game of the
century” against the Houston Cougars at the Houston Astrodome. So it
wasn’t surprising that I was invited to try out for the Olympic
basketball team to represent the U.S. in the 1968 Olympics in Mexico
City. Any other year I would have been proud and elated at the
prospect of playing for my country against the world’s elite athletes.
But 1968 wasn’t like any other year.
The Vietnam War had divided the country more violently than any time
since the Civil War. The nightly news clips of U.S. planes bombing the
Vietnam jungle was paralleled by clips of angry, sometimes bloody,
clashes between war protesters and war supporters. The Tet Offensive,
in which 80,000 Viet Cong troops attacked 100 towns and cities in an
effort to end the war, proved that the enemy was resourceful, resilient
and in no mood to surrender. It also increased public opinion against
the war.
But the war wasn’t the only cause for all the social unrest
and upheaval. It was more like a bright light that illuminated many
other social ills that we’d all managed to ignore or, even worse,
pretend didn’t exist. Black soldiers stationed in Vietnam complained
of rampant racism. When Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated that
same year, some white soldiers flew Confederate flags outside their
barracks. Some blacks tried to avoid the racism by requesting to serve
in all-black units. One Air Force report confirmed what black soldiers
already knew: “Unequal treatment is manifested in unequal punishment,
offensive and inflammatory language, prejudice in assignments of
details, lack of products for blacks at the PX, harassment by security
police under orders to break up five or more blacks in a group, and
double standards in enforcement of regulation.” Military discrimination
didn’t just result in hurt feelings, it could result in death: by 1966
over 20 percent of U.S. combat casualties in Vietnam were black, which
was a much higher percentage than the total of blacks in the military.
As the racism became more evident, some black soldiers naturally
questioned their loyalty. After all, the Vietnamese were people of
color, subject to the same racial discrimination that they themselves
were experiencing at the hands of whites. Muhammad Ali articulated
this dilemma when he said, “No Viet Cong ever called me nigger.” And
for refusing to register for the draft, even though he was guaranteed
he wouldn’t see combat, he was stripped of his title and sentenced to
five years in prison (later the U.S. Supreme Court overturned his
conviction). On the other hand, some blacks saw the war as an
opportunity. “I thought the only way I could make it out of the
ghetto,” confessed one black paratrooper, “was to be the best soldier I
possibly could.”
Although Vietnam veterans were often disappointed at
the tepid reception they received upon their return home, black
veterans were even more disillusioned because the injustices they had
left to fight against were still alive and well. One black vet
remembers coming home in 1968 and entering a restaurant in Virginia
with some army pals that included two whites and three Hispanics. The
waitress told them she would serve the whites, but not the others. “I
think that going in a lot of us felt like things were going to be
different,” the vet recalls. “And when we realized that things
wouldn't be, a lot of us felt used.”
Violence was almost as rampant at home. First Dr. King was shot, then
Robert Kennedy. The 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago
featured thousands of antiwar protesters that were met with police
violence. In the midst of all this international and domestic turmoil,
the Olympic Games represented, to some, an opportunity to bring people
of all nationalities together, maybe heal some wounds. To others it
represented the usual hypocrisy of ignoring the political problems in
the name of entertainment and profit, because billions of dollars were
at stake.
And there I was in the middle. Twenty years old. The age of many of
the soldiers who were fighting and dying in Vietnam. Some of them
were my childhood friends who I’d grown up with. Because of my
visibility as an athlete, whatever I chose to do would have
international reverberations.
Continue reading Boycott questions: 1968 vs. 2008 »
It's always a pleasure to share something that you find thrilling. The possibility that others might be the thrilled makes sharing such a pleasure. I recently got a bunch of Blue Note discs for my birthday and inside the package was a flyer that advertised T-shirts that featured retro album covers, and one of those albums featured is one of my all-time favorites, "Unity."
The "Unity" disc came out in 1966 or so and was a giant step forward for the post-bop tradition. It features organist Larry Young, who is backed by Joe Henderson tenor sax, Woody Shaw on trumpet and Elvin Jones on drums. For me, this disc distills the post-bop sound that Blue Note was known for. All of the musicians are in their own right first-rate performers. Joe Henderson and Woody Shaw had been featured with Horace Silver's band, and Elvin Jones was one of the key contributors in John Coltrane's rhythm section, while Larry Young was an emerging voice on the organ. Organ players were so confined by the blues and music of the black religious experience that it seemed to the music-loving public that the organ would never be heard in any other context. Larry Young blew down the borders that confined the sound of the organ and stretched it out to include the visions of Bud Powell, Tad Dameron and Thelonius Monk.
I have heard people who are not necessarily jazz band fans rave about this disc, and I'm sure that those of you who have not heard it will be thrilled to add it to their collection. The T-shirt is neat too! Enjoy....K
P.S. I will be moving my blog within the next two weeks to my website www.kareemabduljabbar.com. Please follow me over to my site so you can continue sharing.
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