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  • #46
    Re: share your Chuck Person stories

    For Chuck's first game back in MSA while playing for the Timberwolves, it was actually Micheal Williams that stole the show in crunch time and helf off the Pacers' rally.

    http://www.basketball-reference.com/...302120IND.html

    There were a large number of navy #45 jerseys in the stands that night. Rumors were bouncing around the arena that Chuck and Micheal might come back out and say hi to friends and sign autographs. When the game ended, we didn't head for the exit we walked toward Aisle #12 and were standing behind the Wolves' bench.

    Christian Laettner was a rookie for the Wolves that season, and was also known to come out of the lockerrom after the game looking for cute females to talk to.

    There were more than a 1,000 people surrounding the tunnel at the east end of MSA. Micheal came out and quietly talked to some people Chuck doesn't do anything quiet, and came out to a nice ovation. Laettner came out, and this might be the one game of the season that nobody wanted to talk to him. He wondered around, he'd probably never seen anything quite like that - "a crowd of people out here and not one of them wants to see me?!" Lots of people were saying to Chuck, "Come home, please, this trade is killing us." The Pacers were in the middle of a seven-game losing streak at that time.

    Somebody to my side shouted, "Say something, Chuck!" And Chuck's response?

    "Boom, Baby!", he yelled, then jogged back into the wrong tunnel... the east tunnel.

    Here's an early article of how the trade was pretty much neutral to both teams (as they both had different/ bigger problems that weren't addressed by the trade):

    http://articles.baltimoresun.com/199...laettner-smits
    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


    • #47
      Re: share your Chuck Person stories

      Great sit down with Barkley from a couple of years ago.. some rare Game #4 footage in the first minute or two.

      http://www.nba.com/video/channels/ba...en_person.nba/
      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


      • #48
        Re: share your Chuck Person stories

        A few opinions:

        "Then Donnie Walsh outsmarted himself by trading Rifleman and Micheal Williams for a pile of Pooh (Richardson) and some spare change."

        That "spare change" included Sam Mitchell, the leader in the locker room in the Pacer glory days in the 90's. C'mon now.

        Larry said 'Merry Christmas.'

        No, Larry said 'Merry CENSORED Christmas.' Rhymes with mucking.

        re: Chuck's BB IQ was equal to Larry's

        Jebus wept. No. No! Loved the Rifleman, but he was terrible defensively and a poor passer. Not a clever scorer, either. Not sure where the IQ would be demonstrated.

        Detlef shouldn't have been traded.

        Yes he should've. Det was a stat stuffer who didn't fit. Heavy D Mckey saved the Pacer butts so often it was ridiculous. Or put another way, the classic 90's Pacers played excellent D with the slowest starting center and point guard in the league. The Davises were stout, and Reggie was okay, but Heavy D was Heavy D. Recognize.

        Comment


        • #49
          Re: share your Chuck Person stories

          Originally posted by MagicRat View Post

          http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-7666000.htmlBad back and all, Bird goes one-on-one with Person


          The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)
          June 24, 1991 | Peter May, Globe Staff | Copyrigh
          Free trial for the entire article. Plenty of hilarity involved...

          INDIANAPOLIS -- The war of words, mixed with the predictable smiles and laughter, continues between those two noted quotemasters, Larry Bird and Chuck Person.

          The two were at it again last night as Person played in, and Bird coached/watched the fourth annual Larry's Game at Market Square Arena. They tossed generally good-natured verbal darts at each other in the Pacers-Celtics playoff series last April and they were doing the same last night.

          "I hope Larry comes back," Person said. "I want to send him out in style, the right way. I want to give him his going-away party."

          Bird was asked if he had had any offseason contact with Person.

          "Chuck works for me. He mows my yard. I see him every day," Bird said.

          Does he do a good job?

          "Not really. He has to ride."

          Bird continued, "if it wasn't for Chuck, I'd be averaging about 12 points a game in my career. He reminds me a lot of my little brother. I want to beat him real bad every time I play him."

          Bird also said his triple-double against Indiana in Game 1 of the quarterfinal series should carry an asterisk because he did it against Person.

          What about it, Chuck?

          "Actually, he was lucky I didn't guard him," Person maintained. "Then he would have had an awful series and everyone would have wanted to trade him instead of making him have surgery and bringing him back for another year. They would have wanted him to retire. I let some other guys guard him so he could have a good series and come back and help the league next year."

          Bird had the final word slight, however. He was the coach on Person's team. And that afforded him the opportunity to turn his back on the Pacers' motormouth during the introductions.

          Bird sat on the bench during the game, letting Pacer coach Bob Hill call the shots, such as they needed to be called. He wore a white "Larry's Game" shirt, a far cry from his street clothes attire, an olive green shirt with some unreadable black scribblings on it.

          His coaching debut ended with a 178-170 defeat, despite 22 points from Dee Brown. Afterward, Charles Barkley noted, "There is one thing you cannot have in this game and expect to win and that's poor coaching. I knew when Larry showed up with a beer at halftime that it wasn't all that serious."

          The Celtics' franchise forward is getting in his 7 miles a day of walking. He's also doing some exercises in water, although he wouldn't call it swimming. "Flopping around a little bit," he said.

          The summer is only a few days old and already Bird said his biggest enemy is boredom. There are only so many baseball games to see, and he does watch a lot of them. He has done a little fishing, but finds that tiring because he has to stand all the time.

          He made no predictions as to when he might be able to play. Or, for that matter, if he even would play. He is encouraged that there has been no pain since the day he left New England Baptist Hospital 16 days ago.

          "I'll be glad when the summer is over," he said. "To see if I can play without pain or play at all."

          He repeated his recent thoughts on the Celtics. Brian Shaw should not be traded or even shopped. The team can play with anyone if everyone is healthy. They should have beaten the Pistons even with their injuries. They could use an outside shooter in the draft.

          And, he said, he really doesn't have any regrets about the way he handled things as the season -- and the pain -- intensified.

          "When you're limited and can't prepare yourself, it's frustrating," he said. "I chose to play and do my best. I probably feel better about myself this year than I ever have. What I went through, the problems I had and the way I dealt with them."

          But didn't even he think things became a bit absurd? Like, for instance, spending the night in the hospital in traction?

          "Sometimes you've gotta do things that you don't feel like doing and don't want to do," he said. "For some reason, my body has been good to me and overcome a lot of adversity. There was a lot of days I lay there and didn't think I could play."

          And he made it clear that if there are any of those days next season, he won't play.

          "I'm not going through another year like I did last year," he said. "As a matter of fact, it's got to feel pretty good. I'm not going to whine about retiring now because I want to play. I'll have to see how it feels. It's very important for me to have a healthy back for the rest of my life, instead of beating and banging for another season."
          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


          • #50
            Re: share your Chuck Person stories

            Digging around with my free trial...


            http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-7657889.html

            Here's Bob Ryan's article after Game #2 of the 1991 playoffs. I'm going to highlight one thing in here that is particuarly interesting to all those that are so fixated with Larry Bird's milk-drinker comment a few years ago...

            With just over a minute to go, and the stunning Pacer victory safely stowed away in the icebox, Reggie Miller was dribbling away a little time when Chuck Person started calling for the ball.
            "Reggie!" he pleaded. "Lemme have one more three, Reggie. I want one more three!"

            Person already had an NBA playoff record seven 3-pointers. He had personally acted as Boston's Lord High Executioner, humiliating the Celtics on their own hallowed floor by scoring 39 points without the aid of a free throw. But he wanted more. He wanted to hear the Celtics, the Garden fans, the city of Boston and all of New England bleat a pathetic no mas. Chuck Person was going to extract every minute bit of pleasure from this exquisite afternoon of basketball virtuosity he possibly could.

            "I love it," he declared when the 130-118 win was finally recorded in the books. "National TV. Parquet floor. Those {expletive} banners up there. The leprechauns. They were all trying to stop me, and no one did."

            How good was Chuck Person yesterday? "Gym rats all over America had to love that performance," said Miller. "There'll be guys going out there now throwing up shots from everywhere after watching that. When I'm in awe, that's saying something, because I feel I'm the best shooter in the league."

            Not yesterday. The NBA is a gunfighter's circuit, and there was no one in the league -- or, for that matter, in the world -- who could have shot a basketball with more precision and accuracy and flair and sheer destructiveness than Chuck Person did in Boston Garden on this particular Sunday afternoon.

            He hit shots from straight down the middle. He hit shots from the left wing. He hit shots from the right wing. He hit shots from the corner. He hit turnarounds. He hit shots on transition, catching long passes and firing up effortless treys that did not so much strike the nylon cords as they did caress them. There was none of this "shooter's roll," bounce around the rim six times and fall in stuff. He could have scored his 39 points had the rim circumference been reduced by 6 inches. What more can you say? He was so devastating that even Reggie Miller was impressed.

            Remember, please, that he was doing this on the road in a playoff game against the most tradition-laden team in basketball. He had willingly assumed the role of Public Enemy No. 1 by initiating a public spat with the ultimate local hero. On Friday night Larry Bird put down Chuck Person. The Celtics won the game and Larry Bird got the headlines. Yesterday Chuck Person orchestrated the videotape he's always wanted of a Celtics-Pacers game, out-Larrying Larry in his own living room and then trashing said icon when it was over.

            "This is my day in the sun," he smirked. "I got the last laugh here in the Garden. Maybe I'll have to go home and put my arm in traction tonight."

            When he couldn't think of anything else to say, Person outlined the strategy for doing it all over again when the teams resume combat Wednesday night at Market Square Arena.

            "We've basically got mismatches at every position," he explained. "Now, being a scorer, I've got to know how to analyze the tendencies of the defensive players. {Kevin} Gamble and {Reggie} Lewis, I just take them low. Kevin and Larry, they know I can take them off the dribble, so they back off and give me the shot. If they do get up, I just take one dribble and I can get free for the shot."

            Humility, you may have noted, is not one of Person's long suits.

            "Chuck talks," admits Indiana president Donnie Walsh, "but he can back it up. You've gotta have some guys like that on your team. This is not a melba toast league."


            Chuck Person
            has always done a lot of talking for a guy who in five seasons has yet to appear in an All-Star Game. Granted, the small forward spot is a glamour position, and the East All-Star team always seems to be clogged up with such names as Bird, McHale, Barkley, Wilkins, King and a few others of note, but if Chuck's as good as he suggests, he'd have a little more hardware and jewelry to display. Or perhaps all he's needed is the proper forum to display his talents. Dropping seven threes and 39 points on the Celtics in a playoff game at the Garden tends to get people's attention.

            "I've seen him shoot that way before," says Walsh, "but this was for a lot higher stakes. I've always thought he was on the borderline between very good and great."

            "I've seen him play that way before," agreed LaSalle Thompson. "Today you saw it."

            The Pacers long ago reconciled themselves to Person's bravado, his swagger, his taunting, his emotional outbursts, his basic, well, Chuckness. Person, unlike most players, really wants to be the complete center of attention. "No matter what I do in a game," he shrugs, "if we lose, it's my fault. That's fine with me. I've got wide enough shoulders to carry the load."

            Even a bored Chuck Person has more confidence than 95 percent of his peers. With this historic performance as a springboard, the question arises: What outrageous things might he say and do when the Celtics arrive Wednesday night?

            "Good question," smiles Reggie Miller. "With Chuck, anything is possible."
            "Melba Toast League"??!? Donnie,
            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


            • #51
              Re: share your Chuck Person stories

              Sorry Danman, but the Sonics W/L record begs to differ. Detlef was fine. He didn't fill up empty stats, he did whatever needed to be done. He could pull you outside for the 3, he could get the pass you needed and he rebounded as well as Paul George did. And he did it all coming off the bench in a league where everyone wants to be a starter.

              McKey was also functional and a strong defensive player. But the the 2000 Pacers went to the Finals NOT ON DEFENSE, BUT ON OFFENSE (and McKey played a lot less minutes for that team). They weren't just good on offense, they were elite on offense. So this idea that you had to lock guys down as the only way to win is just not true.

              Larry Brown (even if he didn't believe it), Phil, Pop, Sloan, and Carlisle/Bird - these guys would have won a ton of games with a roster of Jax/Workman, Reggie, Chuck/Detlef/Dale, Rik - Tony, Best. Bob Hill was a classic .500 coach and proved it elsewhere. Worth giving a shot to coach, but not on par with the title winning coaches.


              This is what bothers me the most about so few Pacers games featuring Detlef on Classic/DVD. The Reggie in Charlotte game shows Detlef all over the place, and that's not even one of his elite games. The nights he was hitting triple doubles or close to them, you knew he was out there. Those weren't "empty" stats.



              It's like saying Carlisle was better off without Brad Miller because the team won so many more games. No he wasn't. He was just so much better as a coach than Isiah that despite a roster handicap he still won a lot more.

              Brown was better than Bob Hill, and if they'd kept Detlef then right now you'd be remember a bunch of different big plays Det made on the ECF runs instead of McKey. Different, maybe not defensive, but some assists, scores, or rebounds that were key to the wins. Because with Brown instead of Hill they were going to win more, period. Plus Brown was also given Antonio Davis for free that first year because he was just coming back from Europe.


              McKey was a great Pacers and a tough defender, clearly far better than Detlef on defense. But Det crushed him on offense and made All-Star teams with 2 different teams and as a bench player in the case of the Pacers. How many 6th men also make the ASG? Not many.

              Comment


              • #52
                Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                Again, read Jay's posted articles from game 2. Now look at my story about Chuck doing a flipping WC appearance AFTER that game and BEFORE game 3. And you get 15-20 fans showing up?

                Remember this when the liars tell you how they were always being the team and always loved Reggie. It's total bulls***. MSA did worse back then than the BiLF just did for that Bobcats game. If it's not IU they don't care and never did.


                Game 3 and 4 of that series were the first time MSA really seemed to fill up, and as Jay mentions it had to do just as much with all the Larry Bird fans that wore Celtics jerseys to the game. Like 50/50.

                Can you imagine 50% of the RCA dome being Brady jerseys for the AFC CG? It was so bad back then that it dwarfs the Miami/Chicago attendance problems we have now.

                Comment


                • #53
                  Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                  That game was the 11th greatest in Pacers history, at least up until the 93-94 team yearbook was published (although there is a total points typo). Also, apparently Peck was part of the fan base that helped run Chuck out of town on a rail.........
                  PSN: MRat731 XBL: MRat0731

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                  • #54
                    Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                    Originally posted by Naptown_Seth View Post
                    Bob Hill was a classic .500 coach and proved it elsewhere. Worth giving a shot to coach, but not on par with the title winning coaches.
                    There's a middle ground you're missing. You know I was going to go here:

                    1994-95 NBA SAS 82 62 20 .756 21.0 1 15 9 6 .600
                    1995-96 NBA SAS 82 59 23 .720 18.0 1 10 5 5 .500
                    Now everybody knows the difference. Those Spurs teams had a better roster. Bo Hill had a 0.500 roster with the Pacers and that's exactly what they got from him.

                    Larry Brown didn't take the same team to more success. He took one look at the roster and made a lot of changes.
                    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

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                    • #55
                      Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                      Originally posted by Naptown_Seth View Post
                      Game 3 and 4 of that series were the first time MSA really seemed to fill up, and as Jay mentions it had to do just as much with all the Larry Bird fans that wore Celtics jerseys to the game. Like 50/50.

                      Can you imagine 50% of the RCA dome being Brady jerseys for the AFC CG? It was so bad back then that it dwarfs the Miami/Chicago attendance problems we have now.
                      My memory must be going bad but I remember while the game started out with the usual Celtic crowd it ended completely a pro Pacer crowd including those Indy idiots wearing the nasty green. Specifically Chuck was interviewed after the game and kept gushing he couldn't believe how much Pacer support there was. Even said he and Reggie looked at each other to ask if they were in the right building meaning it was a Pacer home crowd.
                      You know how hippos are made out to be sweet and silly, like big cows, but are actually extremely dangerous and can kill you with stunning brutality? The Pacers are the NBA's hippos....Matt Moore CBS Sports....

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                      • #56
                        Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                        Originally posted by Naptown_Seth View Post
                        They never should have traded Det, even though McKey was a great defender and they 100% never should have wasted their time trying to get a "name" PG...although there was a bit of that going on when they went after Jackson later, but in some ways he was trying to recover his name in LAC after "failing" in NYC.

                        Williams went on to set the NBA record for consecutive FTM in Minny, BTW. Then he got injured and his career was over.

                        Also, by far the greatest Pacers trade ever was sending Herb to Dallas for Detlef. Not young Herb either, but old Herb for a rising NBA star that was a key figure in the pre-drug implosion of the first great Mavericks team.
                        I completely disagree with you that they never should have traded Deltef. Detlef and Brown were feuding and not getting along, he had to be traded and McKey was perfect for what this team needed at that time. Pacers would not have been as good in '94 or '95 without the Det for McKey trade.

                        Pacers did have way too many offensive players who didn't defend in the early 90's, they were extremely soft. Rik, Det, Chuck, Reggie, and Michael Williams - that was a horrible defensive lineup. Adding Woody, McKey, Dale Davis all tough physical defenders changed the culture of the team and they became winners. No Brown wouldn't have won with the offensive 5-some I listed above - not at all.
                        Last edited by Unclebuck; 02-15-2013, 09:11 AM.

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                        • #57
                          Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                          Also Det let it be known to Donnie he wouldn't mind going home to Washington (the state, not the Capitol). Worked out both ways in Brown wanted a trade and Walsh didn't like how Detlef was outspoken about leaving for the west coast.
                          You know how hippos are made out to be sweet and silly, like big cows, but are actually extremely dangerous and can kill you with stunning brutality? The Pacers are the NBA's hippos....Matt Moore CBS Sports....

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                          • #58
                            Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                            Originally posted by Naptown_Seth View Post
                            Sorry Danman, but the Sonics W/L record begs to differ. Detlef was fine.
                            I think that Payton and Kemp were the main reasons for their impressive W/L records. They won 55 games the year before Detlef came. They were both extremely young players then. Sure they won 63 when they added Detlef, but I think the growing of Payton and Kemp was the main reason for that improvement.

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                            • #59
                              Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                              This thread is awesome! Chuck was just before I remember watching the Pacers. I mean I did with my grandparents but I was too young to remember what was going on. I remember being told about the punts in Chicago. And it was awesome to hear about Reggie trash talking Pippen and then saying they had nobody besides Jordan. Where is that now!? The NBA NEEDS that now.
                              The 19 Line Coming Soon!

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                              • #60
                                Re: share your Chuck Person stories

                                Originally posted by Mo Tibbs View Post
                                This thread is awesome!
                                2nded, great thread!

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