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Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

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  • #31
    Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

    The MFer Could Play!

    Not being disrespectful, that's how Mel described players he scouted for the Pacers, "the MFer can play" or "the MFer can't play". He was a big person and a big personality.

    RIP Mel.
    "Just look at the flowers ........ BANG" - Carol "The Walking Dead"

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

      Originally posted by Hoop View Post
      The MFer Could Play!

      Not being disrespectful, that's how Mel described players he scouted for the Pacers, "the MFer can play" or "the MFer can't play". He was a big person and a big personality.

      RIP Mel.
      Did you see this one?


      http://www.1070thefan.com/blogs/brun...atest-champion

      Pacers lose their greatest champion

      Conrad Brunner Oct. 30, 2015





      The voice was a little thinner, as was the frame, but the handshake could still crush ball-bearings.

      Mel Daniels was exactly where he was supposed to be Thursday night, exactly where he belonged. He was at the Pacers game. The effects of his latest open-heart surgery were apparent, but there was nowhere else he could better spend his last night on Earth.

      When Daniels passed away Friday afternoon, the Pacers lost their greatest champion.

      As a player, as a scout, as an assistant coach, as a lifelong presence, Daniels cared more passionately for this franchise than anyone I ever encountered in any sport. He didn’t always like the way the players played or the coaches coached, but he unfailingly cared. His idea of loyalty wasn’t being a simpering yes-man, it was being honest. The truth was Mel Daniels’ currency, and if you couldn’t spend it, your loss.

      His arrival in a lopsided trade with the Minnesota Muskies in 1968 pulled this thing together, made it happen. The team had Roger Brown, Freddie Lewis and Bob Netolicky, but adding Mel took them to the ultimate level. He was more than a consistent scorer, a ferocious rebounder and defender, an undeniably intimidating physical presence, his was the heartbeat of that team. In six seasons he won three ABA championships, two league MVP awards, and four times was named all-league.

      His playing days ended with the NBA-ABA merger, not because he wasn’t good enough, but because he already had given every ounce of basketball in his body to the Pacers.

      After spending a few years as an assistant coach at Indiana State, a tenure that coincided with that of Larry Bird, Daniels rejoined the Pacers in 1986, when Donnie Walsh was hired as general manager. I came along in 1988, and for two guys that couldn’t have come from more disparate backgrounds, Mel and I were drawn to one another by a mutual respect for honesty, and thus a friendship was born.

      Donnie was the professor who taught me the about the game at its highest level; Mel was the practitioner who made it real. The greatest compliment he could give a player was this: “He’s a (four-syllable expletive that begins with mother) man from head to toe,” and he reserved it for a very select few. He deeply respected players that reflected his values – toughness, sacrifice, team.

      And he had little use for those that did not.

      (Who can ever forget his quote about Benoit Benjamin, a gifted but passive center in the 1980s? “To call him a dog,” Mel said, “is an insult to dogs.”)

      There was more to Mel than basketball, but make no mistake, he was all about the game. As much as he loved his horses, as much as he eventually revealed through his poetry, nothing moved Mel more than a basketball game well-fought.

      When an icon passes, he leaves an everlasting legacy, and Mel’s is that of a powerhouse, an indefatigable winner, the first guy in and the last guy out, every single time.

      When a friend passes, he leaves so many stories for his friends to cherish and, when it comes to Mel, there are too many to print, so I will stick to my absolute favorite.

      A few years ago, the Miami Heat were in town, bringing the usual traveling circus. When Mel walked into the press room for our usual pre-game chat he had a different tone in his voice.

      “I need to ask a favor,” he said, more than a little urgently. “I need you to introduce me to Alonzo Mourning.”

      I chuckled, thinking for an instant he was messing with me. But only for an instant. He gave me that look, probably something close to the same look he used to throw at Neto a few times a game, the one that made it clear I needed to get back to reality. Mourning was traveling with the Heat as a member of the team’s front office, and Mel seriously wanted this chance to meet the man.

      “You’re Mel Daniels, you can go wherever you want in this building, you don’t need me,” I said. “Besides, why do you want to meet Alonzo Mourning?”

      For the first time, Mel spoke to me not as a legendary ex-player, a veteran of the game, but as a fan.

      “Because he’s a (four-syllable expletive that begins with mother) man from head to toe,” he said, “and I want to tell him that.”

      I marched into the Miami locker room, found Mourning, introduced Mel and walked away. This was a moment between two ultimate warriors, not something a mere typist deserved to witness.

      Mel felt the same way about Dale Davis, about David West, and especially about the baddest man of them all, Reggie Miller. That odd couple forged an unbreakable bond because Mel recognized right away what made Reggie special. He saw the same fire burning behind those eyes, the same need – not desire, need – to win driving him through every day, the same sense of brotherhood with his teammates.

      When Reggie went into the Hall of Fame, so did Mel. Sometimes the poetry writes itself.

      There is another story now, though, the one without a happy ending.

      On his last night on Earth, Mel wanted to talk about these new Pacers. He had high hopes for Myles Turner, really liked the way the kid seemed to have a passion for the game, a trait absent from too many young big men these days. He loved to talk about Rodney Stuckey, because he was a big man’s guard. He hoped Paul George would find a way to make the spread lineup work, didn’t want his doubts to sprout into something maleficent. You could tell Mel saw embers of Reggie in Paul, and wanted to see the spark.

      And then he grabbed my arm, furrowed his brow and said, “When are they going to let George (McGinnis) in the Hall of Fame?”

      Fighting for his teammates, to the end.

      Every single one of them would tell you the same thing: he was a (four-syllable expletive that begins with mother) man from head to toe.


      Why do the things that we treasure most, slip away in time
      Till to the music we grow deaf, to God's beauty blind
      Why do the things that connect us slowly pull us apart?
      Till we fall away in our own darkness, a stranger to our own hearts
      And life itself, rushing over me
      Life itself, the wind in black elms,
      Life itself in your heart and in your eyes, I can't make it without you

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

        Heard the news on the way home from work tonight.

        Very trying week and that was like a punch in the gut I never, never wanted to hear.

        I'll tell you guy what I told my wife....

        Without Daniels there is no Indiana Pacers!

        Without Daniels we don't win the titles.

        Without the titles there is no Telethon.

        Without the Telethon there is no Pacers.

        I know its was a great team with Roger, Freddie, Billy, George and Neto but man Mel was the man.

        I will always remember that oh so sweet fade away. Another of my childhood idols is lost.

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

          That's probably my favorite Conrad article.

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

            Originally posted by Jose Slaughter View Post
            Heard the news on the way home from work tonight.

            Very trying week and that was like a punch in the gut I never, never wanted to hear.

            I'll tell you guy what I told my wife....

            Without Daniels there is no Indiana Pacers!

            Without Daniels we don't win the titles.

            Without the titles there is no Telethon.

            Without the Telethon there is no Pacers.

            I know its was a great team with Roger, Freddie, Billy, George and Neto but man Mel was the man.

            I will always remember that oh so sweet fade away. Another of my childhood idols is lost.
            I agree, I think Mel was the building block for the whole thing. Not only that his mentoring of Reggie was vital.

            RIP Mel

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

              I don't think we will ever know how valuable he was to the support of modern Pacers. I know that Reggie Miller considered him a key proponent to his success.

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

                Originally posted by Jay@Section12 View Post


                And then he grabbed my arm, furrowed his brow and said, “When are they going to let George (McGinnis) in the Hall of Fame?”
                I've been wondering the same thing.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

                  I grew up in southern Indiana and watched the Pacers on TV (could catch them on both Indy TV and Louisville TV when they played the Kentucky Colonels). I lived too far away to go to the games in person. One year, when I was maybe 11 or 12, the Pacers and Colonels played a preseason game in the Seymour High School gym. My parents took me to the game, my first Pacers game. We arrived early, apparently before the Pacers team bus arrived. After we got into our seats, Mom asked me to run back out to the parking lot and retrieve something from our car. I sprinted out of the gym and (literally) ran headfirst into the largest human being I had ever seen....Mel Daniels. Mel and the Pacers were just walking into the gym. I don't remember who won or lost, but I'll never forget how big Mel was. Sorry to see him gone, way too early.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

                    Originally posted by PacersHomer View Post
                    I've been wondering the same thing.
                    Someone get Ted Green onto making a documentary for George. That seems to do the trick.

                    While I never got the opportunity to get that rookie card signed by Mel, I'm glad as hell I took the opportunity to meet him at the draft party this year. Probably time to move the signed 8x10 to a better place of honor now.
                    "Nobody wants to play against Tyler Hansbrough NO BODY!" ~ Frank Vogel

                    "And David put his hand in the bag and took out a stone and slung it. And it struck the Philistine on the head and he fell to the ground. Amen. "

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

                      Originally posted by Sandman21 View Post
                      Someone get Ted Green onto making a documentary for George. That seems to do the trick.

                      While I never got the opportunity to get that rookie card signed by Mel, I'm glad as hell I took the opportunity to meet him at the draft party this year. Probably time to move the signed 8x10 to a better place of honor now.
                      I agree, George should be in.

                      Do you all realize that George McGinnis is the only player to win a regular season MVP award in either the NBA or ABA that is not in the Hall of Fame? That is of those players that are eligible for the HOF.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away




                        I wish I could make it.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

                          So, I learned tonight that my seatmate talked to Mel at Thursday's game with about 1 minute to go. He said "Mel, what do you think is wrong with this team?", and Mel's response was "They can't make good decisions worth a ****".

                          He said Mel was pretty disappointed with the Grizzlies game. 2 days later, they're planning a tribute for him at Thursday's game. The world turns fast.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away


                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

                              Nice article in the NY Times,
                              http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/01/sp...970s.html?_r=0
                              By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN

                              Mel Daniels, the Hall of Fame center who led the Indiana Pacers to three American Basketball Association championships and became the leading rebounder in the league’s history, died Friday in Sheridan, Ind. He was 71.

                              His death, which was announced by the Pacers, came the day after he attended their season’s home opener. The cause was not given, but he had heart problems and had been hospitalized in October.

                              At 6 feet 9 inches and 220 pounds, Daniels was an intimidating presence on defense, a fierce rebounder, and loath to pass up a fight, though he had a sensitive side, having written thousands of unpublished poems. He possessed a nearly unstoppable fadeaway jump shot.

                              Daniels was the A.B.A.’s rookie of the year in 1967-68 with the Minnesota Muskies, having signed with the fledgling league despite being selected by the Cincinnati Royals in the first round of the N.B.A. draft.

                              He spent the next six seasons with the Pacers, taking them to A.B.A. championships in 1970, 1972 and 1973 under Coach Bob Leonard. He was named the league’s most valuable player in 1969 and 1971 and was a seven-time All-Star.
                              Photo

                              Mr. Daniels, in 1998, later became a coach for the Pacers. Credit Pacers Sports & Entertainment
                              He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame at Springfield, Mass., in 2012.

                              Daniels was right at home in the rough-and-tumble league with the red, white and blue basketball.

                              “I loved to knock guys down,” he told Terry Pluto in his A.B.A. oral history, “Loose Balls” (1990). “When you went to the boards, you did it with your elbows out. If there was a fight, it wasn’t just one-on-one, it was 12-on-12. The fine for fighting was $25. That wasn’t going to stop any fights.”

                              As his teammate Billy Keller put it: “He scared people out of driving the lane. If he went for a ball and ended up with someone’s head in his hands, he was just as likely to put a headlock on the guy as let him go.”
                              Daniels was the A.B.A.’s career leader in rebounds, with 9,494, and he averaged 18.7 points a game in his eight seasons in the league.

                              After playing for the Memphis Sounds in his final A.B.A. season, he played in Italy for one season, then closed out his career in the N.B.A., playing briefly for the Nets in 1976-77, the first season of the A.B.A.-N.B.A. merger.
                              Photo

                              Mr. Daniels won the A.B.A.'s rookie of the year in 1967-68 and retired as the leading rebounder in the league's history. Credit NBAE, via Getty Images
                              He was an assistant coach at Indiana State in the late 1970s when the future Boston Celtics Hall of Fame player and Pacers coach Larry Bird played there and later became an assistant coach and director of player personnel for the Pacers.

                              Melvin Joe Daniels was born on July 20, 1944, and grew up in Detroit, his family having moved there from North Carolina when he was a child. His father, Maceo, worked for an auto parts manufacturer.

                              After playing at Pershing High School in Detroit, he became an all-American center at the University of New Mexico, averaging 20 points a game.

                              He averaged 19.4 points and 16 rebounds a game with the Pacers, who retired his No. 34 jersey in 1985. It hangs at the team’s Bankers Life Fieldhouse along with those of his Pacers teammates George McGinnis and Roger Brown and the latter-day Pacer Reggie Miller.

                              Daniels, who lived on a ranch in Sheridan, north of Indianapolis, is survived by his wife, CeCe; a son, Melvin Jr.; his sisters Vivian and Wanda; and two granddaughters, The Associated Press reported.

                              Daniels’s mother, Bernice, read poetry to him when he was a youngster, and he was writing poems by age 8 or so. He continued to write them through his playing days and thereafter, focusing on athletes’ lives but also on the world beyond sports. He preferred not to share them with his teammates, presumably to avoid being ribbed.

                              “This is the side I’ve kept quiet,” he once said.
                              Why do the things that we treasure most, slip away in time
                              Till to the music we grow deaf, to God's beauty blind
                              Why do the things that connect us slowly pull us apart?
                              Till we fall away in our own darkness, a stranger to our own hearts
                              And life itself, rushing over me
                              Life itself, the wind in black elms,
                              Life itself in your heart and in your eyes, I can't make it without you

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Mel Daniels Has Passed Away

                                MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR DANIELS

                                When: 1 p.m. Thursday

                                Where: Bankers Life Fieldhouse

                                Admission: Free and open to the public

                                Speakers to include: Reggie Miller, Bob "Slick" Leonard, Darnell Hillman, Bob Netolicky, Mark Boyle, Mark Montieth and Jeff Foster.

                                Donations: In lieu of flowers, the Daniels' family has requested donations be made to Dropping Dimes Foundation, which assists former ABA players in need. Donations can be made at droppingdimes.org or sent to Dropping Dimes Foundation, 111 Monument Circle #2700, Indianapolis, IN 46204. Attn: Scott Tarter.
                                BillS

                                A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
                                Or throw in a first-round pick and flip it for a max-level point guard...

                                Comment

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