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Feb 28, 2013 - Issue 506 |
Ode to Jerry Buss:
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We
take a break from the serious stuff to give propers
to a man who changed our lives and changed our culture
in the city of As
a firsthand observer of this nonchalant-ness for
nearly fifty years and encountering my fair share of delusional people, I can
tell you nothing fazes the people of “ Nothing
excites L.A. Everybody’s “ We
dismiss everything…even when it’s important. Remember, we dismissed professional football over 25 years ago and still don’t know when we’ll get it back. But we’re building a stadium in hopes that the NFL will come back. There is one exception to this cultural passivity, and that’s when it comes to the Los Angeles Lakers. Particularly, the post-1979 Lakers and it’s all because of one man, Jerry Buss. Why
did Jerry
Buss brought a swagger to the Lakers, and a Lakers game became more than a
basketball game. It was an event. Every game. Every season. Winning
only made the game more exuberant and the fans more fanatical. Laid back
was gone forever (though they still leave the games early). There has never
been a fever in Randy
Newman’s song, “I Love L.A.” is a piece of cultural curiosity that came out of Showtime when the Lakers pulled out a
close game in the Showtime era. Showtime is associated with the
Magic Johnson era when the Lakers won five championships in eight seasons. They
went to the finals eight times in eleven seasons. The Lakers won so often, the
city forgot what it was like not to be in the finals. We got spoiled
winning and being entertained. After Magic retired (the second time), the Lakers went into a five season lull. Then Jerry Buss did what he had to do. He hired the winningest coach in basketball, Phil Jackson, whose previous employer didn’t think he was worth $10 million dollars a season, even after winning six championships in seven seasons with the Chicago Bulls. They would’ve won seven out of seven had Michael Jordan not retired for a year to play baseball. The point is that Phil knew how to win, and so did Jerry Buss. Money was no object. Phil
bought us five more championships in seven seasons. People hated the
Lakers so much, other stadiums chanted, “Beat L.A., Beat They
do need a coach…but the point is, the Lakers will win
again because it is now part of their culture. They expect it. The city expects
it. And it’s all because of the winningest NBA owner
of all-time brought us ten championships over the last 24 years, and that
changed the way the city saw the Lakers. Now every team in the NBA has
cheerleaders, light flashs, music, halftime shows to
create an enriched “fan experience.” That’s a fancy name for showtime off the court. |
BlackCommentator.com Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad,
is a national columnist, managing director of the Urban
Issues Forum
and author
of Saving
The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com. Twitter @dranthonysamad. Click here to contact Dr. Samad.
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