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Role of a Lifetime

Page 2

by James Brown


  No more. What in the world was next?

  I knew that this was where I belonged. This was where I was meant to be.

  There were still six of us out on the basketball court. It had been a long workout and our bodies—white and black—were glistening and dripping with sweat. It had been a long training camp, but with the exhibition season fast approaching, we were getting in some extra work.

  I was receiving an education in Savannah summers. They are incredibly hot, with little breeze, and even extended past what I had always considered to be a normal summer. DC certainly gets hot, but the grip of the summer heat at least starts to break a bit by September. Not only was it sweltering and still outside in the ninety-two degree Georgia heat, it was even hotter inside the Savannah Civic Center.

  There were only sixteen or seventeen of us left in camp, and a handful of us were getting in some extra work after practice. It was a combined camp, consisting of the Atlanta Hawks veteran players along with a few of us rookies who had lasted this long.

  This was both a culmination and a commencement. The apex of my basketball career to date, and yet merely the threshold of the true dream which God had placed in my heart, making use of the talents that He had given me. My professional basketball career lay before me: the dream of playing in the National Basketball Association with some of the best basketball players in the world. I felt I belonged. I was where I wanted to be. Shortly the twelve-man squad would be leaving the Savannah summer and its oppressive heat behind for the slightly cooler weather of an Atlanta autumn to begin the exhibition and regular season of 1973.

  I had been drafted in the fourth round by the Atlanta Hawks of the NBA and in the sixth round by the Denver Rockets. The Rockets, of the American Basketball Association, opted to wait until the sixth round because they—correctly—had ascertained that I would prefer to play at the highest level, in the National Basketball Association. I had worked too hard and too diligently, and sacrificed too many other things for too many years to not pursue this at the highest level, with the Hawks, even if the Rockets were optimistic that I would make the squad. There were no such guarantees from the Hawks, but frankly, as I viewed the situation and my talents, I didn’t need any. I was having a good camp, and like any competitive athlete, I had been taught that there was no challenge so great that I could not overcome it.

  By all accounts, I was a leaper. I was hailed as one of the best leapers to come out of the District of Columbia basketball ranks, which helped offset my size—I am only six feet five inches tall. I would need every bit of that jumping ability if I was going to enjoy the long-lived career that I believed I would have in the NBA.

  Some of the things taking place in that camp could be taught and learned. “Pistol” Pete Maravich was our star. He could do unbelievable things with a basketball—dribble between his legs and behind his back at full speed, and whip the craziest, unexpected passes your way, with mustard on them so you had to be alert or risk losing a tooth. He could dribble a basketball in each hand—two balls simultaneously—and beat me and the rest of the squad down the court, while each of us were only dribbling one ball.

  Leaping ability, however, is something innate that inspires awe. Scouts looked for that, and other innate abilities that couldn’t be taught. Those were the things that could make the difference between championships and mediocrity. That leaping ability had made me a high school center, even though I was relatively short by basketball standards. Humorously, I often tell people that I began high school as a six-foot, six-inch freshman, but graduated as a six-foot, five-inch senior. (It’s conceivable that we may have “exaggerated” a bit in those early years.) As a center I had been a two-time high school All-American, and one of the top five prep players in the country, coming out of the storied basketball program at DeMatha Catholic High School in Washington, DC. In large part because of my leaping ability, that made me—by those who followed such things at the time—one of the greatest leapers in DC history.

  Coming up I was tough playing inside—in the paint. I blocked shots and rebounded better than players far bigger than I was, employing a combination of what I would describe as ability and tenacity. My opponents might have characterized things a bit differently. But the truth is—I wanted the ball. I also had a very soft corner jump shot, which I could take out to the wing with similar success as well. I knew that in the NBA I couldn’t be nearly as effective in the paint at six-five, so I was relying more and more on my outside game. My shooting touch had always been solid throughout high school and I worked to make it as reliable as possible when I was in college, and was moved from the center and forward positions I had played in high school to a small forward and big guard in college. But, to be honest, I had a decent outside shot.

  The rest of my game hadn’t developed as much in college as it probably should have, but I was a smooth, solid player and was establishing myself with an excellent camp as a number two guard, also called a shooting guard. I hadn’t played a great deal in the backcourt, and still needed to polish up some of those areas of my game—ball control and ball handling, penetration, the transition game, more movement without the ball, and getting into the flow better on the offensive side of the court. Still, it had gone well. So well that I was a three-time All–Ivy League selection.

  And now, I had been selected by the Hawks in the 1973 NBA Draft. I was chosen after Dwight Jones of the University of Houston and John Brown of Missouri, their two first round picks, Tom Inglesby out of Villanova in the second round, and Ted Manakas of Princeton and Leonard Gray of Long Beach State were taken in the third round. There were twelve rounds then, and I was, I knew, competing with Ted and Leonard and the other players drafted behind me—except for Dave Winfield, taken in the fifth round, who they knew would go on to play baseball instead—for one spot on the twelve man roster. Counting the first three draft selections, the team stars Pete Maravich and Lou Hudson, and other returning veterans from the prior season’s playoff team, I knew that Cotton Fitzsimmons, the head coach, and his staff had accounted for eleven spots. That was fine by me—that still left one spot. I just needed one spot.

  I was going to be the twelfth.

  We finally finished our extemporaneous pickup game of three-on-three, and I stayed to shoot a few more free throws. My effort hadn’t been quite what it needed to be in college, even though I had done well, but I was making up for it during those first four weeks of camp. I had been steady, and felt that I would not only be able to hold up through an eighty-two game season but that, with hard and extra work, could improve even more rapidly and develop those other areas I would need to be able to contribute to the success of the team.

  I finished my free throw time and decided to head down to the whirlpool in the Civic Center, to try to lessen the aches and pains that I would feel in my knees in the morning.

  While I was in the whirlpool machine, treating my aching muscles, one of the assistants entered the trainer’s room and found me. He told me that Coach Fitzsimmons wanted to meet with me. This wasn’t unusual, by my way of thinking. Coach had been helpful all along to give me pointers on things to work on outside of practice, and now we were approaching the time to leave Savannah and head to Atlanta to start the slate of exhibition games. I showered and dressed quickly and headed up to his hotel room.

  “JB, you’ve been a great guy, and it’s been a pleasure to have had the chance to have you with us for the last few weeks.” I nodded and smiled, but the smile melted from my lips as the realization of his use of the past tense began to sink in. My mind began racing, but I snapped out of it just in time to hear, “I’m going to let you go.”

  “You’re kidding me,” was all I could manage. It was unthinkable.

  “You’ve got a great background, a great education, and I have no doubt that you will do great in the game of life,” Coach Fitzsimmons said.

  “Well, that’s all well and fine, Coach. But I wasn’t looking to do any of that right now. I want to play basketball rig
ht now in my life. This is what I’m good at. This is my future. Help me understand how I don’t have what’s necessary to make this team.”

  He didn’t have a direct answer. He didn’t have to—even though I thought I needed it at that moment. Whatever his answer—the deal was over. It was a matter of the numbers, he said. He simply needed to cut one more player, and I was that one.

  I was devastated. Everything around me seemed out of place. It was surreal. There was no scenario I had imagined in which this was the possible outcome. Not one. I hadn’t dreaded heading up to his hotel room, because it was always someone else being released. It certainly wasn’t going to be me.

  But this time it was me. The dream was over, already.

  I couldn’t imagine what was next. The thought that I wouldn’t make the final roster had been unthinkable for me, when others were making alternative arrangements this summer. Now it was a reality. I hadn’t prepared for, I hadn’t even thought of a fallback plan for my life. College classmates were heading off to law school—no, they had already begun law school, as it was September. I remembered that I had always wondered if I might be interested in law school, but…

  I’m not sure that I said anything else to Coach Fitzsimmons. He was wrong about his choice, I knew that much. He had kept a journeyman veteran over me, a solid player, but I was better. At least that’s how I saw it.

  This was so inconceivable. I felt sick, and I could feel my face burning, my eyes beginning to well up. I wondered what I would say to my family and friends. I felt like I was in some kind of free fall, headed toward a future that I couldn’t even conceive. Actually, no kind of future at all, as far as I was concerned. Of more immediate concern right then was getting out of his hotel room before I started to cry.

  My bags were mostly packed in my hotel room, as I had kept everything together in anticipation of heading back to Atlanta with the team shortly. I looked around the hotel room, trying to gather any loose items I had left lying around. My stomach was in knots, and I was having trouble thinking clearly.

  I knew this was a disaster. That much I could focus on.

  The Hawks intern drove me to the Savannah airport, where the franchise would finish its obligations to me with a one-way flight back to DC. He had made these trips before. Now he was taking me. We traveled in silence, the shimmering heat before us, the deafening silence of defeat—my defeat—engulfing us.

  The plane trip home was silent. At least no one else on the plane knew what had just happened. It was not supposed to be like this.

  Once I arrived home, I could still smell the stench of defeat all around me. Despite being twenty-two years old, a Harvard graduate, and having to share a bedroom with three younger brothers and a young uncle, I walled myself up in the house for the next two weeks.

  Somewhere way down deep inside me, maybe I knew things would get better. I wanted to believe that something else I was supposed to do would begin to surface. I know now that God was still there, even in my discouragement, whether I was aware of His presence or not. He is there in our good times and our bad, I know now.

  But at that moment, I was without direction, and without the energy or inclination to think about anything else. Between anger, feeling sorry for myself, and crying, I didn’t have any free time.

  It wasn’t supposed to end this way.

  CHAPTER 2

  ROOTS AND SACRED TRUSTS

  You don’t choose your family. They are God’s gift to you, as you are to them.

  Bishop Desmond Tutu

  It was 2004 and there I was, a broadcaster on national television every week, and suddenly I found myself unable to speak a single word. Speechless, my family and friends would say, for the first time in their recent memory.

  I can stand in front of crowds full of total strangers, audiences made up of well-known personalities and dignitaries, or even in front of television monitors knowing that people beyond the farthest reaches of my imagination are watching in living rooms, restaurants, community centers, and a variety of other venues, and yet, I was so emotional I couldn’t get out… a… single… word… for what seemed like a minute. I composed myself and spoke from my heart tenderly what my Mom meant to me.

  She went by a variety of names: Mrs. Brown, Ma Brown, or Mother Brown. To her friends she was Mary Ann.

  To me she has always been Mom.

  And now we were gathered together to celebrate Mom on the event of her seventieth birthday and, more importantly, we wanted to give thanks for God mercifully giving Mom back to us after she had gone into code blue the previous year. We had decided to put all of our finery on display to honor her in a loving, intimate way, with HER making the final decisions. The family was in black tie and formal attire, and I had watched with admiration as my siblings, family members, and lifelong friends, spoke to her and about her. My sister had time-lined the whole celebration and wanted us to be mindful of the time, because of Mom’s health and the need to get her back home and to bed before the hour got to be too late. All of the comments were very touching. And so, when it was my turn to speak, it was very difficult.

  There were too many memories.

  At heart, I am truly a mama’s boy.

  This book is as much about and a product of my parents, and specifically my mother, as it is a story of anything else. I was born in the southeast part of the District of Columbia, but most of my childhood memories are from times after we moved in the late 1950s, when I was around eight or nine years old, in third grade, into the home I grew up in near Catholic University, in the northeast section of DC. It was a modest home in a solidly middle-class neighborhood that was simple, and like most neighborhoods back then, it was safe. It was a neighborhood that had been predominantly white, but now integration was taking hold, and the face of the neighborhood was slowly changing. After we moved in, with some other black families following behind, the white families began to leave.

  My father, John Brown, reminded me of Joseph, the husband of Mary, in the New Testament. He was the breadwinner, the backbone of the family, dutifully obedient to the role that he felt that he was committed to play as the head of the household. I remember my father working two and three jobs to provide for Mom and the five of us children, allowing my mother to stay home and raise us. He quietly went about his work, providing a good example of what a strong father looked like while my mother took the primary hands-on role in raising the children.

  My father was actively involved in the lives of his wife and children. Despite being busy with his multiple jobs, he was always there for us. He was a taxicab driver, a corrections officer at a local jail (a now closed DC correctional institution housed in Lorton, Virginia), at Avis Rent A Car, a car wash attendant, and a longtime post office employee—all the while caring for five children. He worked long, hard hours, and modeled for us what it meant to support your family as a loving, guiding father. I know that he would have preferred to be with us even more than his hard work to support us permitted. He was always there for our important occassions, making as many sporting events as possible.

  When my father spoke, we moved—actually, we jumped. John Brown didn’t have to say anything to us twice. What he said was the law, as it was with my mom. They demanded and received our respect, without fail. At times, what he said was catchy. He had axioms that he would trot out and leave with us: “Every good-bye is not gone,” and “Every shut-eye is not sleep.” Things that were pretty tough to puzzle over if you were just twelve. And he’d simply leave it out there—without explanation—for us to ponder. He always seemed very wise.

  My father was from the Georgetown area of Washington, and had been in the army. He served during the beginning of the Korean War just before my birth in February 1951, and continued later as a member of the Army Reserves.

  When I ran across my birth certificate in our house, I noticed, with surprise, that my dad’s occupation at that time was “car wash attendant.” And as I thought about how my family was living in a nice middle-clas
s neighborhood, it was my first introduction to a lesson which would never leave me—how you start in life doesn’t have to be how you finish.

  As for Mom, well, to me she was much larger than any single character. Mom was our Rock of Gibraltar, as strong a woman as you’d ever find.

  My parents were a very sociable pair, at least early on in their marriage when I was a young boy. I remember a lot of activity, a number of gatherings of friends, many of them my father’s army buddies. For me, those experiences underscored the importance my parents placed on camaraderie and the beauty of friendship. They embodied the concept of togetherness for me and my sister and brothers, and gave us a lasting example of how two people should be together—for each other, their family, and others.

  When I say that I’m a mama’s boy, I don’t mean it in the usual pejorative sense that gets bandied about. She was one of the strongest people I know, a woman of strength, integrity, and character, of resolve and courage. I saw firsthand, especially in her later life, how she lived according to God’s Word, reading from her Bible each day, and exhibiting for us the way our lives should be lived.

  My mother and father were responsible for training us and shaping us morally. We like to say, they had PhD’s in Common Sense. Our home was a place of joy and togetherness, a sanctuary for the Browns where we knew that we were always loved. It was also a place of great wisdom—which I began to appreciate later in life—as my mother would share lessons with us straight from God’s Word, around the family dining room table.

  There were five of us children and later her younger brother Clifton that she took seriously the responsibility to rear and nurture into productive members of society: John, Alicia, Terence, Clifton, Everett, and myself. John is eighteen months younger than I am, Alicia three years, Terence and Clifton five, and Everett is eight years younger than me. She must have had her hands full dealing with us, and she might have felt that way, but we never thought that was the case. It always appeared to us that everything was running smoothly and that Mom was completely in control of whatever was happening. When Mom, the Sergeant, spoke, we saluted. It was always “yes ma’am, no ma’am.”

 

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