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Why do people dislike Kareem Abdul Jabbar?
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:28 pm
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:28 pm
The Lakers were hesitant to build him a statute. He hasn't had any coaching experience (to my knowledge). And I've heard people claim they don't like him.
What is the reason behind this? I was 3 when he retired and don't know much about his career.
What is the reason behind this? I was 3 when he retired and don't know much about his career.
This post was edited on 3/5/13 at 5:29 pm
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:30 pm to Nonetheless
I don't like his bald head, but he seems like a nice guy.
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:31 pm to Nonetheless
He was a Lakers assistant and help turn Bynum around.
He was a dick to everybody when he played though. He's paying for it now.
He was a dick to everybody when he played though. He's paying for it now.
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:31 pm to Nonetheless
I think he's the greatest...but my dad says that he didn''t work hard enough on defense. And he says that lots of times, he didn't even run down court. And that he didn't really try... except during the playoffs.
So maybe that.
So maybe that.
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:32 pm to Nonetheless
he's "out there", but not in a fake way like bill walton, who has used his weirdo/outsider views to become a lovable idiot
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:32 pm to eyeran
What did he do exactly? Was he just arrogant toward the media like Barry Bonds or something?
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:33 pm to Zamoro10
quote:
I think he's the greatest...but my dad says that he didn''t work hard enough on defense. And he says that lots of times, he didn't even run down court. And that he didn't really try... except during the playoffs.
I already covered this in the Oscar Robertson thread.
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:34 pm to Zamoro10
Were you the little kid on Airplane?
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:36 pm to Nonetheless
quote:I'm not a Kareem aficionado but from what i've read, he just really didn't have time for anybody but himself. He wasn't necessarily a bad guy, just kind of a weirdo.
What did he do exactly? Was he just arrogant toward the media like Barry Bonds or something?
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:36 pm to Zamoro10
quote:
I think he's the greatest...but my dad says that he didn''t work hard enough on defense. And he says that lots of times, he didn't even run down court. And that he didn't really try... except during the playoffs.
Damn you. Beat me to it
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:44 pm to Nonetheless
I think he was very aloof toward teammates and fans. He also kept to himself off the court -- he collected Persian rugs and ran a jazz label. Kareem and Magic were as different as night and day.
A lot of that had to do with his size. I read his autobiography years ago and he talked about being insecure over his height -- like when he was in high school he got turned down for a job at a diner because he was too tall. Girls were scared of him too.
These were the days when a big center was kind of scary and intimidating. This was before the idea of the big man being an overgrown kid, like Shaq or Dwight Howard
A lot of that had to do with his size. I read his autobiography years ago and he talked about being insecure over his height -- like when he was in high school he got turned down for a job at a diner because he was too tall. Girls were scared of him too.
These were the days when a big center was kind of scary and intimidating. This was before the idea of the big man being an overgrown kid, like Shaq or Dwight Howard
Posted on 3/5/13 at 5:50 pm to Nonetheless
quote:
Was he just arrogant toward the media like Barry Bonds or something?
He was arrogant with everyone. He refused to sign autographs, even for kids. He would blow fans off. Hell, one of the kids he refused to sign an autograph for turned out to be Magic when Magic was only a kid
Posted on 3/5/13 at 6:48 pm to timbo
He's not only aloof, but he seems overly sensitive and judgmental. He prefers to be alone and from all appearances those that know him prefer it as well.
Posted on 3/5/13 at 6:49 pm to Zamoro10
Well in his defense, he DID have to drag Lanier and Walton up and down the floor for 48 minutes...
Posted on 3/5/13 at 7:06 pm to timbo
quote:
I think he was very aloof toward teammates and fans
It's hearsay evidence so take it for what it's worth but I've heard stories that he's kind of a dick and brushes people off that ask for autographs.
Posted on 3/5/13 at 7:08 pm to Zamoro10
quote:
And he says that lots of times, he didn't even run down court. And that he didn't really try... except during the playoffs.
You can say this about a ton of BIG guys that have played the game.
Posted on 3/5/13 at 7:11 pm to tigerspin
Huge fan of Kareem, good for him for not being one just another athlete. Kareem, in my eyes, is the educated center. He might have been selfish, but I wouldn't call him a diva. Especially compared to some his contemporaries and successors (Wilt,Shaq).
Posted on 3/5/13 at 7:13 pm to RonBurgundy
Well in his defense, he DID have to drag Lanier and Walton up and down the floor for 48 minutes
___________________________
i love that scene, even grabs the kid by the shirt ...
___________________________
i love that scene, even grabs the kid by the shirt ...
Posted on 3/5/13 at 7:18 pm to Nonetheless
quote:
But his glories on the court have gone hand in hand with private emotional agonies, about which he's always been guarded. There was a break with his parents over his conversion to Islam; the 1973 mass murder of his Islamic teacher's family in the Washington, D.C. townhouse Abdul-Jabbar had given them; a split from his first wife the same year; the notorious 1977 on-court punch that decked Kent Benson and earned him the hostility of press and public; a January 1983 fire that destroyed his $2.5 million Bel Air home along with his priceless 3,000-disc jazz collection. In the past, Abdul-Jabbar's instinct has customarily been to draw deeper into his own protective shell. "Kareem is like a cat. When he wants to be around, he's right there, and when he doesn't, he's unapproachable," observes Cheryl Pistono, 28, his live-in girlfriend and the mother of Amir.
This is an excerpt from a People's magazine article in 1984.
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